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Jumat, 06 Juli 2012

Bahrain Accuses Activists of Terror, Subversion .

Bahrain accused 23 Shiite activists, including political leaders and prominent clerics, of promoting terrorism and plotting to overthrow the monarchy, a move expected to add to sectarian tensions ahead of elections in the small Gulf Arab nation.

The accusations come after a wave of arrests last month of members of the country's majority Shiite community, which has long complained of discrimination by Bahrain's Sunni leadership, despite political overhauls ushered in by King Hamad bin Isa al Khalifa. Activists say the arrests and charges against respected leaders of the community could further alienate disaffected Shiites.

Bahrain's experiment with limited democracy is often viewed as a barometer of political and sectarian tensions in the wider region, where Sunni regimes fear an expansionistic Iran and the growing clout of Shiites in Middle East affairs. Saudi Arabia, in particular, fears that instability among Bahrain's Shiites could prove a trigger point for that country's own restive Shiite minority, who live close to Bahrain in Saudi Arabia's main oil-producing region.

Bahrain is home to the U.S. Fifth Fleet, which is responsible for U.S. naval forces in the Mideast and off the coast of East Africa. Political unrest is unlikely to affect the status of the base.

On Saturday, state prosecutors announced charges against 23 men, including the heads of two splinter political groups and prominent Shiite clerics, including plotting against the king, terrorist financing, arson and sabotage.

"This sophisticated terrorist network with operations inside and outside Bahrain has undertaken and planned a systematic and layered campaign of violence and subversion aimed squarely at undermining the national security of Bahrain," said Abdulrahman al Sayed, an official at the Public Prosecutors office, in a statement.

Lawyers for the charged men weren't available for comment.

The Bahraini authorities have issued a gag order on local media about the case. They also recently banned opposition websites in the kingdom, including the site run by largest Shiite political organization in Bahrain, the Islamic National Accord Association, known as al Wefaq, which controls 17 of the 40 seats in the lower house of parliament.

In the 1990s, Bahrain, an island city-state, was plagued by widespread civil unrest by Shiites fighting Sunni-dominated security forces. Tensions calmed after King Hamad took over in 1999, instituted constitutional changes and allowed Shiite political organizations to participate in elections for the lower house of parliament, which helps shape laws in conjunction with a second body whose members are handpicked by the king.

Local human-rights activists said the crackdown was part of a wider strategy by the government to undermine an increasingly effective political opposition ahead of national elections scheduled for Oct. 23.

"The opposition is divided between participation and opposing participation in the vote. When you arrest one side of the debate, it makes it harder for the other supporters to vote without appearing to be puppets of the regime," said Nabeel Rajab, the vice president of the Bahrain Center for Human Rights, whose website has been banned in the kingdom.

On Sunday, King Hamad said in a national address that the recent arrests were necessary for national security and didn't signal a reversal of civil rights.

The government has released few details about the alleged terrorist network, and Western diplomats based in Bahrain said they didn't know what evidence the government had to support the charges.

The crackdown began with the Aug. 13 arrest of Abduljalil Al-Singace when he returned from a trip to London. Mr. Singace, named by prosecutors as a leader of the alleged terrorist network, and most of the 23 men charged with terrorism offenses, are members of Haq, or the Movement of Liberties and Democracy, a splinter group of al Wefaq.

Late-night clashes between security forces and young Shiite protesters, many of whom are unemployed and affiliated with Haq, are a frequent occurrence in Bahrain. Security forces face gangs burning tires and armed with crude Molotov cocktails.

Haq leaders said last month that they would boycott the upcoming October elections, as they did with polls held in 2006.

Last month, al Wefaq leader Sheikh Ali Salman warned that the uptick in arrests among Shiites would lead to more protests.

Colleagues of the men charged with terrorism go a step further, saying that the arrests will strengthen the extremist edge of the Shiite opposition movement. "Calling [the detained leaders] terrorists, this is something that no one believes here in Bahrain. This move shows that government does not tolerate any opposition," says Mr. Rajab, the activist. "This branch of opposition, those outside the mainstream, will now become stronger."

Write to Margaret Coker at margaret.coker@wsj.com

Kamis, 05 Juli 2012

Terror Groups Hijack Charity Cash

Exclusive unsuspecting members of the public are being duped into donating cash to charities that are fronts for terror groups. Europol, an arm of the European Union that gathers information from national police forces, says “substantial” amounts of money innocently donated to apparently good causes is ending up in the pockets of terrorists.

Even raffles are being used to con people, Europol believes.

It is also highlighting an increasing trend by terrorists to use women. A spokesman for Europol told the Sunday Express: “Women are involved in propaganda, support and financial activities. Men are more likely to be involved in actually perpetrating violence.

“Women are also used as cash couriers and they sometimes smuggle documents and take care of administrative matters.”

In a report detailing trends in terrorism and extremism in the EU, Europol says Britain is the number one target for terrorists.

It identifies Islamic extremism as the biggest threat, with the growing power of radical youth groups of particular concern.

In trying to combat the threat, EU police forces want to cut the lifeline of illegal funds, which also come from organised crime. The EU Terrorism report for 2010 says: “Illegal sources for the financing of terrorism cover a wide range of criminal activities including fraud, counterfeit products, drug smuggling, kidnapping, human trafficking and extortion.

“Alongside criminal activities, funds can also be derived from legitimate sources. Charitable organisations continue to be misused by individuals who misappropriate voluntary contributions destined for genuine purposes to fund terrorist activities.”

Financing terrorism was one of the most common reasons for arrest in the EU-wide battle against extremism last year, according to the report.

Rob Wainwright, the British director of Europol, which the Sunday Express last week revealed could become an FBI-style force with the power of arrest, said: “In some cases it is difficult to differentiate between criminality and acts of terrorism. Terrorism is not an ideology but a set of criminal tactics which deny fundamental principles of democratic societies.”

Although Britain’s Charity Commission works with the Serious Organised Crime Agency if there is a suspicion of illegal activity, it admits being unable to monitor how individual charities’ funds are spent.

The problem is more acute if the cash is sent abroad. Last year, a trustee of a northern-based charity was arrested in Bangladesh after the country’s police found an arms cache in an Islamic school for which he had been raising funds.

A Charity Commission spokeswoman said yesterday: “We carry out risk-based monitoring where appropriate as part of our case work. Where allegations of criminality arise, these will be for the police and law enforcement agencies to assess.”

Meanwhile, Europol is also concerned about the rise of far-right extremism against Islam after it emerged last week that football hooligans have formed a group called the European Defence League.

Police fear it could hijack Champions League matches to stage its protests.

By Ted Jeory
Source: Express

Selasa, 03 Juli 2012

Germany: Money laundering to finance crime, terrorism grows

German police and financial authorities have warned of an increase in money laundering. The numbers have more than tripled in recent years and the methods are becoming ever more sophisticated.

Authorities in Germany have warned of a steady increase in money laundering. Recorded cases went up by 23 percent in 2009 with a total number of 9,046, according to figures presented by the financial market watchdog BaFin and the BKA federal police agency on Wednesday. The number of cases has tripled since 1995.

BKA head Joerg Ziercke said one of the main reasons for the increase was the rising number of financial intermediaries who offer their private bank accounts for money laundering. For an often small fee, individuals agree to send money abroad or to other financial intermediaries who then channel the money to foreign accounts.

Fake Internet purchases
"These people are being approached through the Internet," Ziercke said at a press conference on Wednesday. "They are asked to offer their accounts for transferring money for products allegedly bought on the Internet."

"The products are then not being delivered, and the owner of the account gets a commission. That way the money that's been transferred is channelled … into accounts outside of Europe."

In almost one-third of investigations into organized crime, there are cases of money laundering, Ziercke said. Nearly 100 of the cases recorded in 2009 were linked to suspected financing of terrorism.

More international cooperation needed
The BKA said better international cooperation could help quell the problem.

Within Germany it's the job of financial market watchdog BaFin to be on the lookout for illegal transactions or money transfers that reek of money laundering. Increased international cooperation aside, BaFin also called for tougher fines and sentences.

"Compared to the authorities in the US or in London, it's almost a joke when you look at the fines that we can impose here in Germany," BaFin head Jochen Sanio said.

Fines in Germany are limited to a maximum of 100,000 euros ($128,000), while abroad, Sanio said, authorities can easily charge millions if they uncover a significant case.

Author: Andreas Illmer (AFP/AP/dpa)
Editor: Nancy Isenson

Rabu, 27 Juni 2012

Publication: Assessing the impact of terrorism on travel activity in Greece

Author Info
Helen Gazopoulou (egazopoulou@bankofgreece.gr) (Bank of Greece)

Abstract
The aim of this paper is to assess the volatility of Greek travel receipts by considering the extent to which terrorist strikes can bring about serious unexpected disturbances to the proceeds from tourism.The paper shows that the impact of terrorist attacks at an international level is not expected to bring about a considerable decline of the number of arrivals to Greece. This finding seems consistent with other sources in the literature that argue in favour of the transitory impact of terrorist attacks on the flow of tourists to a specific destination

Click here to download:

Terror Cell Uncovered in Canada

Three people have been arrested in Canada as part of an alleged hometown plot.

Hiva Mohammad Alizadeh, 30, and Misbahuddin Ahmed, 26, residents of Canadian capital Ottawa were arrested on Wednesday and made a brief court appearance on Thursday. Police have said that they expect more arrests.

The Toronto Star reported on a third arrest in the case, this time of a man who appeared on “Canadian Idol”, Canada’s version of the popular television program “American Idol”, in 2008.

Khuram Sher, 28, was arrested in London, Ontario, in connection to the terror plot. Sher is a 2005 graduate of the McGill medical school in Montreal. In 2006, he visited Pakistan during relief efforts after an earthquake in Kashmir. He auditioned unsuccessfully for “Canadian Idol” in 2008, where he told judges he was originally from Pakistan and came to Canada in 2005.

The suspects are charged in connection with a plot to make and detonate improvised explosive devices as well as financing terror groups operating in Afghanistan.

Canadian police said on Thursday that the terrorist cell was based in Ottawa and had international connections. The cell was only reportedly months away from exploding bombs on Canadian soil, said a senior police official.

Police allege that the three men have been conspiring since February 2008 with three others in a terrorist plot traced back to Iran, Pakistan and Dubai.

Chief Superintendent Serge Therriault, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police chief of criminal operations said police seized more than 50 electronic circuit boards that could be used to produce improvised explosive devices, similar to lethal bombs that have been involved in the majority of deaths and injuries of Canadian soldiers in Afghanistan.

“This group posed a real and serious threat to the citizens of the national capital region and Canada’s national security,” Therriault said.

Alizadeh faces charges of making or possessing explosive devices for terrorist purposes and terrorist financing. According to police, he is an active member of an unnamed terrorist group.

“Part of the decision to make the arrests at this time was to prevent the suspect from providing financial support to terrorist counterparts for the purchase of weapons which would in turn be used against coalition forces and our troops (in Afghanistan),” said Therriault.

Alizadeh and Misbahuddin were remanded in custody until they make a video court appearance next Wednesday.

Sher’s relatives reacted in shock to his arrest. "He was always joking around. He was a contestant on Canadian Idol. He's such a great guy," said Mariam Wasty, Sher’s cousin, to Postmedia News. "I don't know why he'd be connected to this."

Khurram Sher's uncle, Rafat Syed said: "Oh my god, impossible. He's not that type of person. You must be joking.”
Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Thursday that terror networks have a global reach: “They exist not only in remote countries but through globalization and the Internet, they have links in our country and all through the world,” he said.

Minggu, 24 Juni 2012

US couple pleads guilty to funding Hezbollah

By JPOST.COM STAFF

Report: Married couple with dual Lebanese, US citizenship admits they planned to provide terrorist group with up to $1 million.

Hor and Amera Akl, a married couple from the United States, pleaded guilty pleaded guilty on Monday to charges of planning to courier money to Hezbollah, the Associated Press reported. The couple had been planning to send up to $1 million to the US-classified "terrorist organization" throughout the year, federal prosecutors said.

The plea deal was was meant to save Hor and Amera Akl, parents of three children and dual American and Lebanese citizens, from life sentences.


An FBI agent reportedly gave the couple their first $200,000 shipment that was to be hidden in an SUV prior to their arrests last June, the Associated Press reported the US government as saying. Hor Akl had traveled to Lebanon in 2010 to arrange the transport, and when he returned claimed he had met with Hezbollah officials.


The Akls, who were expected to earn $200,000 in fees to ship the funds, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to provide material to a foreign "terrorist organization," and Hor pleaded guilty to money laundering, bankruptcy fraud and perjury charges as well.

In return, prosecutors dropped an arson charge against both individuals that would have landed them an obligatory 10-year sentence and a money laundering charge against Amera Akl. The couple could have faced 30-year sentences if they had been convicted of all charges.

Instead, Hor Akl faces seven years in prison while Amera faces up to four.

Amera Akl is set to be sentenced June 20, while her husband still lacks a sentencing date, the Associated Press said. They remained free on bail after their pleas.

Kamis, 21 Juni 2012

Terror arrests in Ireland are third highest in Europe

by Michael Freeman

There were more arrests over terrorism offences in Ireland than almost anywhere else in the EU last year, according to a new report.

Some 62 terror suspects were taken into custody in the Republic – more than ten per cent of the European total. They included 57 people suspected of republican paramilitary activity and five in relation to Islamic militancy, Europol’s EU Terrorism and Trend Report reveals. The five Islamic terrorism arrests came after an alleged plot to murder Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilks, who drew a controversial image of the prophet Muhammad, was uncovered in Ireland in March 2010.
Only Spain and France made more arrests in 2010, though the numbers there were far greater. France arrested 219 people and Spain 118, while in fourth place the UK figure was 45. Ireland’s figures were almost double the previous year, when only 33 suspects were taken into custody.

The main other findings of the report were:

  • There were a total of 249 terrorist attacks carried out across the EU, with 40 perpetrated by terrorist groups based in Northern Ireland and the Republic.
  • The Real IRA and Continuity IRA “continue to pose a threat” in the UK, and have grown in size and capability in recent years.
  • Ireland has a mostly successful record for prosecuting terrorism offences, with 83 per cent of cases resulting in conviction. However, the average jail penalty of five years is below the EU average.
  • The report noted that Ireland had successfully implement an EU directive on money laundering, designed to restrict financing of terrorism. 
  • A total of 179 people were arrested in Europe on suspicion of Islamic terrorism. This was a 50 per cent increase on the previous year, and almost half the arrests were made over planned attacks on EU countries.
  • The report warned that continued political unrest in North Africa could shake up al-Qaeda affiliates and lead to them establishing a greater presence in Europe. It also stated that most of the suspects arrested over alleged Islamic terrorism were acting alone or autonomously – meaning there is no single network or organisation which can be targeted.


Europol is the EU’s criminal intelligence agency, which works with law enforcement organisations across all member states.

Source: The Journal

Selasa, 19 Juni 2012

US maintains Cuba, Iran, Sudan, Syria on terror sponsors' list

The US has retained Cuba, Iran, Sudan and Syria on the list nations which allegedly sponsor of terrorism.

The State Department retained these four countries in this list after Secretary of State Hillary Clinton determined that the government of these nations has repeatedly provided support for acts of international terrorism.

As a result, these countries would face a wide range of sanctions including a ban on arms-related exports and sales; controls over exports of dual-use items, requiring 30-day Congressional notification for goods or services that could significantly enhance the terrorist-list country's military capability or ability to support terrorism; prohibitions on economic assistance and imposition of miscellaneous financial and other restrictions.
Designated as a State Sponsor of Terrorism in 1982, the Government of Cuba maintained a public stance against terrorism and terrorist financing in 2010, but there was no evidence that it had severed ties with elements from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and recent media reports indicate some current and former members of the Basque Fatherland and Liberty continue to reside in Cuba, the State Department said.

Iran, designated as a State Sponsor of Terrorism in 1984, remained the most active state sponsor of terrorism in 2010.

Tehran's financial, material, and logistic support for terrorist and militant groups throughout the Middle East and Central Asia had a direct impact on international efforts to promote peace, threatened economic stability in the Gulf, and undermined the growth of democracy, it said.

In 2010, Iran remained the principal supporter of groups implacably opposed to the Middle East Peace Process, it added. Sudan, which was designated as a State Sponsor of Terrorism in 1993, the State Department said remained a cooperative partner in global counter-terrorism efforts against al-Qaida in 2010.

During the past year, the Government of Sudan worked actively to counter AQ operations that posed a potential threat to US interests and personnel in Sudan.

Sudanese officials have indicated that they viewed continued cooperation to the US as important and recognized the potential benefits of American training and information-sharing.

Syria was designated as the State Sponsor of Terrorism in 1979. In 2010, it continued its political support to a variety of terrorist groups affecting the stability of the region and beyond, the report said.

The State Department said Syria provided political and weapons support to Hizballah in Lebanon and allowed Iran to resupply the terrorist organization with weapons.

The external leadership of Hamas, the Palestine Islamic Jihad, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command, among others, were based in Damascus and operated within Syria's borders.

Statements supporting terrorist groups like Hamas and Hizballah consistently permeated government speeches and press statements, it said.

Sabtu, 16 Juni 2012

US report salutes Maghreb counter-terror efforts

Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) represents the main terrorist threat in the Greater Sahara and Sahel region, according to a terrorism report recently released by the US State Department.

The Middle East and North Africa overview in the 2009 Country Reports on Terrorism, released to the public on August 5th, found that AQIM was mainly active out of the north-eastern part of Algeria and northern Mali. Al-Qaeda members moved across the Arab Maghreb and Sahel region – especially between Mali, Niger, and Mauritania to mount attacks.

Ransoms for the release of kidnapped foreign hostages provided AQIM with its main source of funding, the report noted. Although governments in the region have tried in the past to confront AQIM, they still need foreign support in building military and law enforcement capabilities, the analysis said.

AQIM operations along "under-governed borders", however, have "posed a challenge" for state responses, Ambassador-at-Large Daniel Benjamin, the co-ordinator for counter-terrorism at the State Department, explained at an August 5th press conference in Washington.

Benjamin called on states in the Arab Maghreb region and around the world to adopt a "no-concession policy" with kidnappers so that their funding flow can be stopped.

Operations by Algerian security services and public rejection of terrorism "have reduced al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM)'s overall effectiveness during the past two years", the new report said.

"Algerian security forces have done a very good job [in defending] Algeria proper and as a result, al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb is pushing to the south in the Sahel: Mauritania, Niger and Mali… increasing the number of attacks there," National Counterterrorism Centre deputy director Russ Travers pointed out at the press conference.

The report noted a decrease in the number of high-profile terrorist attacks in Algeria in 2009, although low-level terrorist activities continued in rural areas in the form of roadside bombs and ambushes laid for security forces.

The document stressed that Algeria's Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), which now calls itself al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), does not have any popular support.

As a result of declining numbers, AQIM has been hard at work trying to win the media war, as witnessed by the organisation's ability to conduct an attack and claim responsibility via communiqué within hours.

The report stressed the need for Algerian security forces to adapt continuously to AQIM's changing tactics.

Algeria's efforts to confront terrorist activities were also noted by the report. Algiers recently hosted a meeting of military chiefs of staff from Mali, Libya, Mauritania, and Niger to develop a regional counterterrorism strategy and establish a regional command centre in Tamanrasset. In addition, the Algerian government instituted a programme to hire 100,000 new police and gendarmes, reinforce the borders, augment security at airports, and increase the overall security presence in major cities.

AQIM poses the main terrorist threat to Mauritania, analysts found. The report reviewed a number of attacks that targeted foreign interests and nationals in 2009, the most prominent of which was the suicide attack near the headquarters of the French Embassy in Nouakchott.

Regarding Morocco, the document stated that the government pursued a comprehensive counterterrorism approach that emphasised neutralising existing terrorist cells through traditional intelligence work, pre-emptive security measures and collaboration with regional and international partners.

Building on popular rejection of terrorism, the Moroccan government has worked to reduce extremism, dissuade individuals from becoming radicalised and promote moderate and peaceful religious viewpoints.

Morocco also addressed terrorist financing and money laundering operations through the Financial Intelligence Unit created in April 2009.

Moroccan authorities were able to dismantle a number of terrorist cells. However, the report added, the mere presence of these groups stresses the need to continue to be cautious and vigilant.

The report noted that the Government of Tunisia placed a high priority on combating extremism and terrorism. In addition to using security and law enforcement measures, the Tunisian government also used social and economic programmes, including health care and public education, to ameliorate the conditions that terrorists exploit for recruitment and propaganda purposes.

As to Libya, the US Department of State report noted that the Libyan government continued to co-operate with the United States and international community to combat terrorism and terrorist financing after Tripoli's decision to renounce terrorism and its weapons of mass destruction programs.

The report reviewed statements by Malian President Amadou Toumani Toure on July 20th, 2009 in which he confirmed that Libya, Algeria, and Mali planned to co-ordinate military and intelligence efforts to fight security threats linked to AQIM in the Trans-Sahara region.

The report noted Libya's reconciliation and rehabilitation effort sponsored by the Kadhafi Development Foundation to convince the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), previously affiliated to al-Qaeda, to renounce violence and terrorism. Six leading members of LIFG, held in the Abu Salim prison, issued a document renouncing violence and claiming to adhere to a more sound Islamic theology.

The report said that LIFG's 417-page document, "Revisionist Studies of the Concepts of Jihad, Verification, and Judgment of People", gave detailed interpretations of the "ethics and morals to jihad". It included the rejection of violence as a means to change the political situations in Muslim majority countries whose leaders are Muslim, and condemned the killing of women, children, the elderly, clerics, and the like. Reducing the notion of jihad to fighting with the sword is an error, it added.

The US State Department report added that Libyan authorities released about 144 former LIFG members and 60 members of other jihadist groups from prison after completing their rehabilitation program.

Finally, the report also indicated that the Trans-Sahara Counterterrorism Partnership (TSCTP) has been successful in building the capacity of Sahara and Sahel region countries and co-ordinating efforts, despite political setbacks over the years caused by coup d'états, ethnic rebellions, and extra-constitutional actions.

The TSCTP is a multi-faceted, multi-year strategy designed to combat violent extremism, and marginalize terrorist organisations by strengthening individual-country and regional counterterrorism capabilities, enhancing and institutionalizing co-operation among the region's security and intelligence organisations, promoting democratic governance, and discrediting terrorist ideology.

The overall goals of the initiative are to enhance the indigenous capacities of governments in the pan-Sahel (Mauritania, Mali, Chad, and Niger, as well as Nigeria, Senegal, and Burkina Faso); to confront the challenge posed by terrorist organisations in the trans-Sahara; and to facilitate co-operation between those countries and US partners in the Maghreb (Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia).

Source: Magharebia

Terror leader Abu Bakar Bashir found guilty

Indonesian cleric Abu Bakar Bashir has been found guilty of inciting terrorism and financing an Aceh-based terrorist cell and sentenced to 15 years in prison, ending a decade-long effort by authorities to put the firebrand militant who endorsed the Bali bombings behind bars.

Hundreds of Bashir's supporters, who chanted "God is great" as judges spent hours reading through a summary of evidence, erupted in jeers when the verdict was read out.

Bashir was convicted for arranging the financing of a terrorist cell uncovered in the Indonesian province of Aceh last year, a new grouping that included a who's who of the remnants of the terrorist group Jemaah Islamiah and other assorted militants.

Prosecutors said Bashir was the "emir" of figurehead of the group, and had held at least one planning meeting with Dulmatin, a senior figure in the Bali bombings that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.
Prosecutors had demanded a life sentence.

Amid an extraordinary security presence that included balaclava-clad snipers on nearby buildings, a defiant and beaming Bashir arrived at the court denouncing Australia and America, saying they wanted to "elimiinate" him because he was "fighting for Islam".

"Australia and America have a very big role ... in determining the court's verdict," Bashir said. "[They would] killl me if they can. If they can't, they just want to get me out of society."

He called on his supporters to keep up the fight for an Islamic state but stopped short of advocating violent retaliation if he was given a lengthy prison term.

"Don't be sympathetic to me, but carry out things on the way to Allah."

Maintaining his innocence before the verdict was read out, Bashir insisted "I am not a terrorist.

"If I helped in Aceh, then it is not wrong. It's in the Koran. It's a defence agains the war on Islam."

Among his supporters at the court were men wearing jackets emblazoned in Indonesian "Holy warrior, not terrorist".

One man leading the chanting was decked out in a shirt with Bashir's photograph printed on the front, and a large image of the former al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden on the back.

Bashir was implicated in the Bali atrocity as he co-founded Jemaah Islamiah and some of the members of the cell had attended his school. Bashir repeatedly praised the bombings and those involved as "holy warriors".

He labelled Australian and other foreign tourists who frequent Bali as "maggots".

But authorities failed in an attempt to bring him to justice on unrelated terrorism offences soon after the first Bali bombings in 2002 and Bashir only served a short term for "rebellion".

A second, later, attempt to convict him of conspiracy involving the Bali attacks also failed after an initial guilty verdict was overturned on appeal.

Before the verdict, Bashir said he would appeal against any finding of guilt against him.

It is feared the sentence could spark an angry response from the supporters, and authorities have been on high alert for the possibility of retaliation.

Prosecutors had demanded a life sentence for Bashir, who was accused of using the radical organisation which he now leads, Jemaah Ansharut Tauhid, as a front to fund a terrorist cell and paramilitary camp found last year in a mountainous jungle area of Aceh on the northern tip of Sumatra.

AAP reports: Reading out the verdict, the chief judge said the evidence presented in the case had proved the defendant had "incited others" to commit acts of terrorism by persuading them to undertake military training at the Aceh camp.

"As well, he persuaded them to commit violence, which led to the deaths of policemen, and which created an atmosphere of terror ... especially for the people of Aceh in general."

Bashir, the former spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiah, the group responsible for the 2002 Bali bombings, has denied the charges throughout the trial, which began in February.

He has not denied knowing about the Aceh camp but has previously said the activities happening there were merely a type of training called idad, which all Muslims must undertake.

A large cache of ammunition and weapons, including AK-47 rifles, was found when the paramilitary camp was raided by police in February last year.

Source: SMH

Rabu, 13 Juni 2012

Software helps intelligence agents monitor terror suspects

The BBC's Frank Gardner investigates how intelligence agencies like the CIA go about tracking the myriad connections between suspected terror masterminds and their networks.

Dan Pearson from i2 explains to him how data analysing software can help agents track terror suspects.

Video Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-13336281  

Selasa, 12 Juni 2012

ARTICLE: Need for a Globally Agreed Upon Definition of Terrorism



Abstract: Globally, terrorism is known to involve the use of violence and threats to intimidate or coerce, especially for political purposes; it is a criminal act that influences an audience beyond the immediate victim. It is out of place that despite the destructiveness of this cruel and evil crime, there is yet to be a globally agreed upon definition for it and this poses problem for the entire international community. This paper states different definitions of terrorism as given by international organisations, states and individuals. It goes further to analyse the different features common to the various definitions of terrorism.  Further to this, the paper highlights the obstacles to having a globally agreed upon definition of terrorism and finally states the benefits of having such an agreed upon definition of terrorism.


Click HERE for the FULL ARTICLE

Source: Ozean Journal of Social Sciences 4(3), 2011, 139


Department of General Studies, Federal Polytechnic, Ede, Nigeria

Senin, 11 Juni 2012

Draft EU - US Terrorist Tracking Program Is 'Substantial Improvement'

Statement on the draft agreement with the United states on the Terrorist Financing Tracking Programme (TFTP). The first day of entering into office as new Commissioner for Home Affairs, the first dossier I was faced with was the Terrorist Financing Tracking Programme, (TFTP) and I made the commitment to the European Parliament and to the citizens to be as transparent as possible regarding this issue, that is why I am here today.

Today I have presented the state of play to the LIBE Committee of the European Parliament and I have of course informed the Member States about it. We are very close to finalising a draft EU-US TFTP Agreement with our US counterparts.

I believe it is very much in line with the Council Mandate and takes account of the key points of the Parliament's Resolution.

As you will understand, at this stage I cannot disclose all the details of the agreement, firstly because it is not yet finalised but also because it still has to be presented to the College of Commissioners. I would however like to point out the considerable improvements we have achieved compared to the interim agreement that was rejected in February. The draft agreement has achieved most of what has been demanded by the Council mandate and has also taken into account the key points of the European Parliaments resolution.

The draft Agreement contains significantly stronger data protection guarantees. In the case of inaccurate data, the Agreement provides for rectification, erasure or blocking of those data.

It sets out a comprehensive mechanism according to which Europol will verify that US requests for data are within the mandate and that they meet the conditions of the Agreement. Europol will assess whether those data are necessary for the fight against terrorism and its financing before the data is sent to the US. It will also verify whether the request is tailored as narrowly as possible in order to minimise the amount of data transferred. Unjustified requests will be rejected and data will not be transferred. Already in the interim agreement, access to individual data has to be related to an ongoing investigation on terrorism.

The draft Agreement also contains significantly more detailed prerequisites for sending lead information (and not the data as such) to third countries. Bulk data can never be sent to third countries. It includes a requirement that prior consent be obtained from the competent authorities of the relevant Member State where the data concern an EU citizen or resident.

Moreover, the draft Agreement provides for a possible EU mechanism on TFTP. It is up to the European Union to decide how this will be tailored, and if. Should the EU decide to set up its own TFTP, the U.S. will commit to cooperate and provide assistance to ensure the efficient establishment of an EU TFTP system. Such a system would of course imply a more limited transfer of data to the U.S.

The draft Agreement also provides for the Commission to appoint an independent EU person who will monitor the activities of the "scrutineers" and the independent auditors. This is a very important result as the US authorities have agreed to have a European permanently monitoring what they are doing.

In addition, the EU will undertake within 6 months of the entry into force of the Agreement, and then on a regular basis, a detailed review of data protection compliance. It means a full access to all the files for the EU team, which is also a very big step forward

As for the retention period for non-extracted data, we explored the possibility of reducing it. In the negotiations, the US produced analysis showing the high value of data that are between 3 to 4 and 4 to 5 years of age. We have agreed therefore to keep the 5 year period. Significantly, according to the draft Agreement after three years the Parties will prepare a report on the value of data retained over several years – with a view to the possible reduction of the data retention period.

On redress we have achieved a non discriminatory treatment for administrative redress and a guarantee to have judicial redress means.

So, to conclude: I believe this draft Agreement is a substantial improvement as compared with the rejected Interim Agreement. It takes account of the key areas that the European Parliament has raised. It addresses the issue of bulk data by ensuring that a European public authority must verify that each and every request is tailored as narrowly as possible in order to minimise the amount of data requested. It includes significant data protection provisions on rights of access, rectification, erasure and redress. It empowers the EU to undertake significant review of all aspects of the Agreement and of the TFTP, of which the Parliament will be kept fully informed. And it takes account of the Parliament's call for a two step approach: holding out for the prospect of an EU TFTP and a relationship of equal partners between the EU and the US.

Of course, some people will always say that we have not achieved enough, but let's have a fair assessment. I am convinced that what we have achieved is a major step forward for European citizens, and is a real success for the European Parliament. First we have the possibility to verify the agreement at several levels: first the EUROPOL request, then we have the regular monitoring by the SWIFT scrutineers, we have then a European monitoring the scrutineers, and in addition we have a review team with representatives from the data protection authorities and an extra person with a judicial background as well.

I am convinced that on this solid ground we can finalise the negotiations: to conclude an agreement that will increase the security of the European citizens while at the same time fully respecting their rights to privacy and data protection.

by Cecilia Malmström - Member of the European Commission responsible for Home Affairs

Why the Iran Sanctions Matter

It's easy to criticize the U.N. Security Council's new resolution targeting Iran. But it might prove a surprisingly effective tool in tightening the noose on the regime in Tehran.

Wednesday's U.N. Security Council resolution sanctioning Iran marks a critical turning point in the U.S.-led efforts to target Iran's illicit activities. The resolution focuses on Iran's nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs; the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), which is responsible for these programs as well as the regime's support for terrorism; and the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines (IRISL), which has been directly involved in proliferation shipments. The sanctions included in this resolution are, as U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Susan Rice put it, "as tough as they are smart and precise." If anything, this new resolution is both too precise and purposefully vague. And therein lies its strength.

The list of 40 entities and one individual listed in the resolution's three annexes is extremely targeted. Employing such "smart sanctions" -- pinpointing the specific entities and persons involved in Iran's illicit conduct and holding them accountable while shielding the general Iranian public from old-fashioned, shotgun, regime-wide sanctions -- has been very effective. This tactic denies Iran's revolutionary regime the chance to deflect blame for the country's economic woes, while disrupting its ability to finance and transport material necessary for its nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs. But the number of entities excluded from the resolution is even more telling than the list of those that made the final cut. Most entities designated this week, for example, had already been designated by the U.S. Treasury Department and/or the European Union. They have therefore already been subject to most of the impacts a U.N. resolution would hope to achieve, such as economic isolation by major financial institutions.

Consider Iran's shipping line, IRISL. The U.S. government first designated IRISL in September 2008 for facilitating the transport of cargo for U.N.-designated proliferators and falsifying documents and using deceptive schemes to shroud its involvement in illicit commerce. And, as the State Department noted at the time of the designation, IRISL had already been "called out by the U.N. Security Council as a company that has engaged in proliferation shipments."

But following up on U.S. and EU designations of entities like IRISL or the IRGC-controlled Khatam al-Anbiya construction company (also called Ghorb) by designating them at the United Nations as well is vitally important to the global sanctions regime. With critical countries such as China, Malaysia, Singapore, and others willing to do only the minimum to comply with Security Council resolutions, getting critical entities like IRISL and IRGC companies designated at the U.N. means wider implementation of sanctions.

Unfortunately, multilateral action is not only difficult to achieve, but can often lead to lowest-common-denominator decision-making. So while international consensus was being built for robust action at the U.N., Britain, the European Union, the United States, and others wisely pursued both unilateral and bilateral financial measures focused on IRISL, IRGC-affiliated entities, and other individuals and institutions facilitating Iran's illicit conduct. With the increased militarization of the Iranian regime and the blatant abuses of the IRGC-affiliated Basij militia, targeting entities affiliated with the Revolutionary Guard unilaterally while international consensus was being built to do so at the U.N. level was an effective strategy. That does mean, however, that this week's list of sanctioned entities is more of a reinforcement of prior actions than completely new ones.

And that's OK. Because though the lists of sanctioned entities are very precise, U.S. and other negotiators made sure that general "hooks" upon which additional actions could be "hung" were peppered throughout the body of the resolution. These will provide the United States and other states and multilateral bodies with the international imprimatur for further action. Put another way, the new resolution is most important not for the specific entities listed in its annexes, but for providing a foundation upon which further efforts to disrupt Iran's illicit activities can be built.

Note, for example, the multiple times the resolution "calls upon all States" to do things above and beyond checking the list of specifically sanctioned entities and persons, such as the call to "exercise vigilance" over transactions involving the IRGC that could contribute to "proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities or the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems." In plain English, this language effectively empowers states and other international bodies to take still more stringent action against the IRGC.

Broadening its sanctions against Iran's shipping company, the resolution "calls upon all States" to inspect "all cargo to and from Iran, in their territory, including seaports and airports, if the State concerned has information that provides reasonable grounds to believe the cargo contains items the supply, sale, transfer, or export of which is prohibited" by this or prior Security Council resolutions. The contrast between the specificity of the list of sanctioned entities and the fairly low standard of "reasonable grounds to believe" is a telling example of purposeful vagueness that could prove powerful in the hands of states inclined to get tough on Tehran.

Similarly, the resolution "requests" that all member states report to the U.N. "any information available" on "transfers or activity by Iran Air's cargo division or vessels owned or operated by [IRISL] to other companies" that might be related to sanctions evasion. The resolution "calls upon" states to "take appropriate measures" -- which, again, by virtue of being appropriately vague is appropriately empowering -- both to prohibit Iranian banks from opening branches, subsidiaries, representative offices, joint ventures, or correspondent relationships with banks in their jurisdiction and to prohibit financial institutions in their territories or under their jurisdiction from opening offices or accounts in Iran.

Indeed, the resolution specifically "welcom[es]" the guidance issued by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) -- the multilateral technocratic body that sets international standards to combat money laundering and terrorism finance -- to assist states in implementing their financial obligations under two previous resolutions, 1737 (2006) and 1803 (2008). In particular, it highlights the FATF's warning to "exercise vigilance over transactions involving Iranian banks, including the Central Bank of Iran, so as to prevent such transactions contributing to proliferation-sensitive nuclear activities, or to the development of nuclear weapon delivery systems." So though the Central Bank of Iran is not specifically sanctioned, it is, broadly speaking, open game.

In February, the FATF named Iran to its new blacklist, recognizing that in support of its weapons programs, its crackdown on democracy, and its terrorist proxies, Tehran has continued to engage in deceptive financial conduct aimed at raising, moving, hiding, and accessing funds internationally. In line with the G-20's call to protect the international financial system from abuse, the blacklist identified countries with deficient "anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism" (AML/CFT) measures. Iran received special designation on the blacklist; it was the only country whose illicit financial conduct merited a call for international countermeasures.

Contrary to conventional wisdom, Iran is highly sensitive to such actions. After one of the FATF's warnings, for example, Iran sent a delegation to lobby the agency despite not being a member. The FATF, however, dismissed Iran's claims that legislative changes had fixed its financial shortcomings, calling the new measures "skimpy" and noting their "big deficiencies." Indeed, the FATF blacklisted Iran even as it recognized the regime's "recent steps" to engage with the agency. The message seemed to be that the FATF would not mistake public engagement for substantive progress. Similarly, though Iran requested technical help from the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime to set up a computer-based training center for its nascent financial intelligence unit, the FATF still highlighted the regime's "failure to meaningfully address the ongoing and substantial deficiencies" in its AML/CFT efforts.

The result is a sharp increase in the cost of doing business for the Iranian regime. European multinational companies are terminating business relationships with Iran, following the lead of major international banks in tightening the noose on Iran's financial system. Chinese and Malaysian companies may lap up available contracts, but many key technologies Iran needs for its oil and gas industries and for its nuclear and missile programs are only available in the West.

And now, for a change, existing sanctions might finally be seriously enforced. Just as important as the specific list of sanctioned entities and the broad invitations to take further action against Iran is the resolution's creation of a monitoring committee, including a panel of experts, to better enforce existing sanctions. Indeed, expert panels proved effective in strengthening sanctions on Sudan and Ethiopia. The "naming and shaming" power of the panel's findings could further influence firms and individuals considering whether to run the risk of doing business with Iran. Furthermore, an expert panel could also help the Sanctions Committee and U.N. member states by recommending ways to make the sanctions more effective. Such a monitoring committee would be particularly effective if it included among its experts individuals knowledgeable about export control and dual-use goods.

But implementation and follow-up is everything in the sanctions business. For the new resolution to make a difference, three things must happen.

First, states like Britain and the United States, regional bodies like the EU, and multilateral bodies like the FATF and G-20 must all act on the resolution's various "calls" to expand the resolution beyond the list of specifically sanctioned entities.

Secondly, the monitoring committee must demand substantive reports from member states upon which it can submit public reports with substantive recommendations for enhancing enforcement of existing sanctions.

Finally, unless the report finds that Iran has become fully compliant with its obligations, the Security Council must quickly follow up on the report with another round of sanctions. The resolution requests that the director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency submit a report to the Security Council within 90 days on whether Iran has established "full and sustained suspension" of its illicit nuclear activities. If the international community does not respond in a timely fashion, the entire premise of targeted and graduated sanctions -- the credibility of which are premised on consequences for ongoing illicit conduct -- will be irreparably damaged. One reason Iran has not been deterred by the sanctions put in place to date is that the deadlines of prior resolutions came and went with no timely follow-up. This delay undermined the whole sanctions enterprise, leaving Iran with the general sense it could survive sanctions, get by, and outlast the resolve of the international community. June 9's resolution offers an opportunity to reverse that trend and re-empower sanctions as an effective tool of foreign policy, one that doesn't require the use of force.

On their own, these sanctions will not solve the crisis over Iran's nuclear program. But wisely implemented and enforced, they could prove critical in preventing Iran from getting the bomb. And that's a very good thing.

The New UN Sanctions Resolution Against Iran

The UN Security Council approved a resolution on June 9th imposing a fourth round of sanctions on Iran in response to its continued nuclear enrichment program in violation of prior Security Council resolutions. The vote was 12 in favor, 2 against (Brazil and Turkey) and 1 abstention (Lebanon).

The new resolution imposes new financial restrictions on Iran, expands an existing arms embargo, and authorizes greater stop and search of Iranian cargo ships. Targeted sanctions on specific individuals and entities were expanded. The resolution also includes measures directed against Iran’s Revolutionary Guard.

While the United States, Great Britain and France were its strongest sponsors, China and Russia also expressed their verbal support along with their votes, although the Russian ambassador added a major caveat in his response to a reporter’s question about Russia’s prospective sale of a sophisticated anti-aircraft system to Iran.

Lebanon’s decision to abstain was a pleasant surprise, considering the influence of Iran-backed Hezbollah in the Lebanese government. However, Brazil and Turkey as expected opposed the new resolution on the grounds that it could undermine the proposed nuclear fuel swap agreed by the two countries with Iran last month. They seemed to forget that the European Union has been trying to negotiate with Iran since 2005 and the Obama administration waited 18 months while trying to engage Iran before seeking passage of this resolution. Only when new sanctions became a real possibility did Iran come around to the fuel swap concept that it had first agreed upon and then promptly reneged on last fall.

Rice’s Positive Spin
U.S. Ambassador Susan Rice told reporters after the vote that the “resolution is strong, it’s tough and it’s comprehensive. And it is something that Iran fought very hard to prevent passage today. The effort, the time, the money, and the poise that they employed, to try to prevent this resolution’s passage only underscores their understanding, that this is a major blow.”

Despite the ineffectiveness of the three prior resolutions, Ambassador Rice expressed confidence that the cumulative effect on Iran of all the resolutions is “harmful and hurtful.”

Iran’s Rebuke
Iran remains unbowed. Its representative told the Security Council after the vote that it had no intention of changing its present course. He accused the United States and Great Britain in particular of continuing a long pattern of interference in Iran’s affairs and displaying a double standard vis a vis Israel. Ambassador Rice told reporters that these comments were “reprehensible, offensive, and inaccurate.”

Stronger Resolution on Paper
On paper at least, the new resolution does appear to represent a significant move forward from the prior three. More specifically, the resolution prohibits Iran from investing in sensitive nuclear activities abroad, like uranium enrichment and reprocessing activities, as well as activities involving ballistic missiles capable of delivering nuclear weapons. The ban also applies to investment in uranium mining.

States are prohibited from selling or in any way transferring to Iran various categories of heavy weapons (battle tanks, armored combat vehicles, large caliber artillery systems, combat aircraft, attack helicopters, warships, and certain missiles or missile systems). States are similarly prohibited from providing technical or financial assistance for such systems, or spare parts.

The resolution also sets up a new cargo inspection framework. States are expected to inspect any vessel on their territory suspected of carrying prohibited cargo, including banned conventional arms or sensitive nuclear or missile items. States are also expected to cooperate in such inspections on the high seas.

States are called upon to prevent any financial service and freeze any asset that could contribute to Iran’s proliferation.

Resolution targets the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
Most significantly, the resolution targets the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) for its role in proliferation and requires states to mandate that businesses exercise vigilance over all transactions involving the IRGC. Fifteen IRGC-related companies linked to proliferation will have their assets frozen. The IRGC is the major power center in Iran’s economic and military spheres as well as one of the government’s primary instruments for suppressing political dissent. Impairing the IRGC’s freedom of operations will be a significant accomplishment, if successful.

The Proof Will be in Enforcement
UN Security Council sanctions resolutions against Iraq, North Korea and Iran have had a bad track record in actual practice. The resolutions have been easy for the sanctioned countries to evade, through the use of multiple front entities, money laundering and trading partners unwilling to give up short term advantage for longer term peace and security.

Also, enforcement of the cargo inspection at sea will be a challenge if Iran, as expected, refuses to cooperate. When the French UN ambassador, for example, was asked what measures France would be willing to take in such a scenario, he refused to answer what he called a “hypothetical question.”

Most ominously, the Russian UN ambassador told reporters that Russia did not consider the sale of its sophisticated S-300 anti-aircraft system to Iran to be within the resolution’s scope. The S-300 missile defense system would no doubt be used by Iran to shield its nuclear sites against a potential air strike, should military force become necessary to stop Iran from producing nuclear bombs. The Russian ambassador is technically correct because the resolution’s ban on the transfer to Iran of certain missile systems is written in such a way that it creates a big loophole for Russia to walk through in delivering to Iran its ground-to-air missiles, including its S-300 anti-aircraft missiles and anti-missile interceptors.

The Obama administration will spin the latest sanctions resolution against Iran as a major diplomatic triumph and a significant obstacle in the way of Iran’s progress towards achieving a nuclear arms capability. I hope they are right. However, until the S-300 loophole is closed; until the U.S. and its allies figure out a way to effectively stop evasions of the sanctions; and until enough countries show that they are willing to enforce the cargo inspections, the Obama administration might want to wait before it celebrates.

Sabtu, 09 Juni 2012

India arrests hawala money laundering suspect Naresh Jain

British police suspect Naresh Kumar Jain, also wanted in Dubai, US and Europe, laundered millions for organised crime gangs

A multimillionaire suspected of being one of the world's leading underworld bankers is under arrest in India after a global manhunt involving British police.

The Serious and Organised Crime Agency (Soca) believes that Naresh Kumar Jain is responsible for laundering millions of pounds of profits from organised crime gangs in the UK over several years. His organisation has been under investigation in Britain since 2006, after inquiries into the cash flows of drug gangs and other criminal networks repeatedly identified his alleged network at the end of money transactions.

Jain, 50, was seized in New Delhi on Sunday, a year after he jumped bail on money laundering charges in Dubai, from where he allegedly ran his operations. Soca is now liaising with both Indian and Dubai police.

Labelled a criminal mastermind by alleged victims, Jain is suspected of laundering money for Albanian and Italian heroin dealers, and narcotics cartels in America, the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan and Britain, according to inquiries in Italy and the US. German and US police say Jain's operation has tentacles in all of the major drug and terrorism hotspots across the globe. He was also wanted by police in Spain and the Netherlands.

According to Soca and other international agencies, Jain is suspected of controlling a laundering system capable of moving $2.2bn (£1.35bn) a year. From Dubai he allegedly provided customers with funds in a country of their choice. It is claimed his network was so extensive and lucrative that he often did not have to physically move money, a fact that made his detection all the more difficult, according to an investigative source.

Ian Cruxton, deputy director of Soca, said: "This operation is part of Soca's long-term strategy targeting specialist money launderers based overseas. These networks pay no attention to cultural or geographical barriers and launder money for organised crime groups from any ethnic background or criminal businesses, particularly UK, Pakistani and Turkish nationals based in the UK and mainland Europe involved in drugs trafficking."

Jain, also known as Naresh Patel, was arrested in April 2007 by Dubai police after a year-long international investigation. Much of the money he allegedly moved was by hawala, an informal honour-based money transfer system primarily based in the Middle East, east Africa and southern Asia.

According to the US department of justice's drug enforcement agency, police in Dubai made a number of searches of his property after his arrest and recovered banking and wire transfer records demonstrating that he was directing money transfers through banks and exchange houses in Dubai, into bank accounts at a finance company in Manhattan. The accounts of the company showed he was involved in "layering," a money laundering technique designed to disguise the origin of sham commodities trades.

The US government obtained a seizure warrant for the funds in the accounts as property involved in money laundering and this year a district judge ordered the forfeiture to the US of more than $4.3m. A further £1.5m in cash from Naresh's business dealings has been held around the world.

A two-year investigation in Italy revealed an alleged trail that suggested Naresh was laundering $4m a day, with heroin and terrorism cash coming in through a beauty parlour in Italy. The Italians and Americans say he was at the centre of a sprawling terror network that was taking in money for the Taliban as well as other criminal cartels.

While inquiries were being made into his activities, Naresh was bailed in Dubai – where he faces trial for breaking foreign exchange laws – and fled his business headquarters. He resurfaced in his native India, where authorities raided several properties owned by him and issued an all ports alert.

Two months ago he denied any involvement in money laundering and claimed he was a businessman who was being trapped. Speaking in New Delhi, Naresh said: "I have a factory in South Africa. I supply ready-made garments in Afghanistan and Nepal. I talked to people in Pakistan in relation with purchasing rice."

British authorities have secured an exclusion order preventing Naresh from entering the UK.

Source: The Guardian

Cyprus’ anti-terror infrastructure ‘weak’ says US

The buffer zone separating the island’s divided communities is vulnerable to penetration by terrorist groups, a United States government report said.

“The largely porous, lightly-patrolled “green line” separating the two sides is routinely exploited for trafficking people, narcotics, and other illicit goods, and is vulnerable to penetration by terrorist groups,” the State Department 2009 Country Reports on Terrorism said.

“This de facto division has precluded counterterrorism cooperation between the two communities’ law enforcement authorities, and between Cyprus and Turkey.”

The report said the regular ferry service between Latakia, Syria and Famagusta, in the Turkish-occupied north, has facilitated increased illegal migration into Cyprus and the wider EU.

Cyprus continued to be an ally of the US in its fight against terrorism and the government was responsive to efforts to block and freeze terrorist assets, the State Department.

In January, Cypriot authorities detained the Cypriot-flagged MV Monchegorsk which was chartered by the Islamic Republic of Iran Shipping Lines and contained Iranian-origin weapons components allegedly headed for Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The components were confiscated by Cypriot customs officials after the Government of Cyprus determined the shipment was in violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions.

Cyprus also “continued to allow blanket overflight and landing rights to US military aircraft supporting operations in Iraq and Afghanistan,” the report said.

But the island’s legal framework for investigating and prosecuting terrorist-related activity remains relatively weak, the State Department said.

The two countries cooperated closely on terrorist financing and money laundering issues with Cyprus maintaining a “Prevention and Suppression of Money-Laundering Activities Law” that contained provisions on tracing and confiscating assets.

“In the Turkish Cypriot-administered area, issues of status and recognition inevitably restricted the ability of authorities to cooperate on counterterrorism,” the report said.

Turkish Cypriots cannot sign treaties, UN conventions, or other international agreements, and lack the legal and institutional framework necessary to combat money-laundering and terrorist financing effectively.

“Within these limitations, Turkish Cypriots cooperated in pursuing specific counterterrorism objectives.”

By George Psyllides Published on August 7, 2010


Source: Cyprus Mail

Jumat, 08 Juni 2012

Brennan: Al-Qaeda Affiliates Turning To Crime For Funding

U.S. President Barack Obama's chief counterterrorism adviser says that with Al-Qaeda's core under financial strain, its affiliates are increasingly turning to crime to fund their operations. 

Deputy National Security Adviser John Brennan made the remarks in Washington at a Treasury Department symposium titled "Ten Years Later: Progress and Challenges in Combating the Financing of Terrorism Since 9/11."

"Reacting to Al-Qaeda's core financial difficulties, its affiliates in East Africa and on the Arabian Peninsula have come to rely less on support from the Al-Qaeda network as they plan and mount terrorist attacks," Brennan said. 

"While the Al-Qaeda core continues to provide strategic guidance, some affiliates now instead have turned to crime to generate funding -- particularly kidnapping for ransom, control of territory, extortion, and at times, drug trafficking." 

Brennan said that the trend is due to pressure exerted on the terror network by sanctions and other measures that have cut off Al-Qaeda from its financiers or disrupted the funneling of money within the organization. 

He also said the Arabian Peninsula "remains the most important source of financial support for Al-Qaeda and its affiliates and adherents worldwide," but praised Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates for making progress. 

Brennan also singled out Iran for its support of Hamas and Hizballah. 

Source: RFERL

Rabu, 06 Juni 2012

US to Significantly Increase Assistance to Yemen

Attaching importance to Yemen's role in the U.S. counterterrorism strategy, the Obama administration has considered a 63-million-dollar assistance to the country, said the State Department on Monday.

"In fiscal year 2010, the president asked for a significant increase in foreign assistance to Yemen," State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters, adding that the administration expects the assistance to be as much as 63 million dollars.

"This amount represents a 56-percent increase over fiscal year 2009 and a 225-percent increase over fiscal year 2008 levels," Kelly added.

According to the spokesman, the development and security assistance does not include 1206 counterterrorism funds, via which the Yemeni government has been authorized 67 million dollars in equipment assistance to support its counterterrorist and border control forces.

Moreover, the United States has been providing anti-terrorism assistance training in Yemen since 1998 through diplomatic security, and has been providing training to develop the government of Yemen's capability to counter terrorist financing.

"We're very concerned about the emergence of al-Qaeda in Yemen, " said Kelly.

"That's why we're increasing our efforts to help the government of Yemen deal with the terrorist threat, to help enhance their border and customs procedures, and why we're increasing our training and also looking into increasing these so-called 1206 funds to help them with their counterterrorist efforts," he added.

Yemen, a vital battlefield in the U.S.-led war against al-Qaeda, is viewed as a weak country without powerful central government control. Under U.S. assistance, the Yemeni government recently has taken more offensive operations against al-Qaeda targets.

Last month, Yemeni officials said raids against al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) hideouts in the southern province of Abyan and Arhab district, to the northeast of Sanaa, left some 60 militants killed and dozens others arrested.

The AQAP, which said the deadly strikes were conducted by the United States, has claimed responsibility for a foiled Christmas Day attempt to bomb a U.S. aircraft.

Source: CRI

Where United States stands in the war against terror

Since 9/11, Americans have been rightly concerned about how the numbers stack up in the struggle against terrorism. Whether one calls it a war or something else, a sense of direction is not just necessary but vital.

-Along those lines, a new report — "Are We Winning?" — by the bipartisan American Security Project (www.americansecurityproject.org), presented at a recent Capitol Hill briefing, raises provocative questions and contributes to the discussion in several ways.

First, it helps us understand the threat; indeed, this is where the report provides its best advice. The following points reveal volumes about the terrorism challenge:

-"The threat is very real and likely to endure."

-"Any progress is likely to be incremental and will require years of prudence and consistency to institutionalize."

-"Our adversaries are strategically savvy and will continually adapt to our actions to achieve their goals. Complacency can quickly turn into catastrophe."

I would describe the situation even more bluntly. The terrorist threat is open-ended and will never entirely disappear. In other words, we can talk about winning in a relative sense, but there will be no final victory. America's best efforts will diminish terrorism, not eradicate it.

Second, "Are We Winning?" examines terrorism in the context of 10 criteria. In four of its categories, color-coded green, the study determines we are making gains against al-Qaida and associated movements. In four additional categories, color-coded yellow, it finds the data uncertain. And in two other categories, color- coded red, it indicates a lack of progress.

Let us consider them one at a time, starting with the most positive, the green category. Although the report acknowledges that prominent figures such as Osama bin Laden in al-Qaida and related groups remain free, it cheers the fact that many of those organizations' leaders are on the run. It also notes international cooperation is improving.

Well and good, but it is worth emphasizing that "on the run" does not mean al-Qaida's leaders lack resolve or the potential to reorganize and rebound. Further, international cooperation still falls far short of what is required. Too many governments wink at terrorist behavior within their borders.

The report's yellow category then indicates that in areas such as terrorist financing, the status of al-Qaida associated movements, and public attitudes in the Muslim world and the United States, it is hard to determine if progress has occurred. That finding speaks for itself, while suggesting opportunities for Washington to take innovative, proactive steps.

Next, we come to the red category, which bemoans the rise of "Islamist terrorism around the world," along with increases in violence in Afghanistan, Pakistan and Somalia. As if that were not enough, the report also points out the danger of ungoverned spaces in Africa, Asia and elsewhere.

Again, opportunity beckons. It is especially important to deal with the virtually limitless danger of ungoverned spaces. We know from past experience in Afghanistan, for example, that failed or failing states provide a breeding ground for violent movements.

Finally, the study makes several recommendations that deserve a place in the U.S. counter-terrorism conversation: that the most effective way to discredit al-Qaida and its cohorts is to challenge their claim to be defenders of the Muslim world.

Beyond that, we must maintain a long-term view and insist on perpetual vigilance, for the adversary is persistent and creative.

by John C. Bersia, who won a Pulitzer Prize in editorial writing for the Orlando Sentinel in 2000, is the special assistant to the president for global perspectives at the University of Central Florida. Readers may send him e-mail at johncbersia@msn.com .

Source: SouthBendTribune