Signal, No Noise

September 1, 2010

Ex-Islamists walk free from Libyan jail

Filed under: Africa,Counterterrorism,Libya,North Africa,Terrorism — mungurk @ 10:01

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By Salah Sarrar – Tue Aug 31, 6:37 pm ET

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Libya freed 37 prisoners late on Tuesday, including at least one former detainee at the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay, who had been jailed for links to radical Islamist groups but have since renounced violence.

The prisoners were kissed and hugged by waiting relatives when they walked out of the Abu Salim prison near Tripoli, in the latest in a series of releases designed to draw a line under radical Islamist violence in Libya.

“These releases come in the context of national reconciliation and social peace,” said Mohamed al Allagi, chairman of the human rights committee of the Gaddafi Foundation, the charity which helped organize the release.

The charity is headed by Saif al-Islam, a reform-minded son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi who some analysts say could eventually succeed his father.

Saif al-Islam has campaigned for reconciliation with Islamists who promise to lay down their arms. His initiative has met resistance from conservatives in his father’s entourage with whom he is competing for influence.

The 37 prisoners, all dressed in traditional Libyan costume, were given refreshments in a tent inside the prison grounds before being greeted by relatives, many of whom were in tears, said a Reuters reporter at the prison.

Five of the prisoners had links to the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), which tried to overthrow Gaddafi but whose leaders have since renounced violence, said Abdelhakim Belhadj, a former LIFG leader freed earlier this year.

Belhadj said the rest of the prisoners released Tuesday had been detained because they sympathized with Islamist militant movements, but were not LIFG members.

Belhadj was among about 200 former Islamist militants who were freed from Abu Salim prison in March, in another release organized by Saif al-Islam’s foundation.

One of the prisoners released Tuesday, Sofiane Ibrahim Gammu, said he was detained in the U.S. military prison in Guantanamo Bay for six years before serving a further three years in Abu Salim prison.

Media reports had earlier quoted an official in the Gaddafi Foundation as saying Gammu was a former driver for al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Asked about the allegation as he left the prison Tuesday night, Gammu said: “I am not bin Laden’s driver. It’s a misunderstanding.”

More than 700 prisoners accused of having ties to Islamist militant groups have now been released under the reconciliation program, but over 300 are still behind bars, according to figures given by Libyan officials.

(Writing by Christian Lowe; editing by Tim Pearce)

May 23, 2010

4 Saharan countries set up joint military base

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Updated April 21, 2010
4 Saharan countries set up joint military base
Associated Press
ALGIERS, Algeria

ALGIERS, Algeria (AP) — Four countries in the Sahara desert opened a joint military headquarters Wednesday in an unusual, united effort to combat al-Qaida-linked terrorism and trafficking in northwest Africa.

The new command and control center is in the Algerian city of Tamanrasset, about 2,800 kilometers (1,740 miles) south of the nation’s capital deep in the desert, the Algerian army chief of staff said in a statement.

The four countries directing the operation are Algeria, Mauritania, Mali and Niger, which share porous borders across the Sahara, the world’s largest desert.

The countries are hoping to establish a collective security response to threats from traffickers and Al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, or AQIM, which operates across northern Africa.

Experts and intelligence officials say the threat is on the rise because terrorist groups are linking up with organized crime, especially South American drug cartels that are increasingly using the Sahara as a cocaine trafficking route. Islamist militants can get new funding and resources by working for these traffickers, experts say.

Countries in the region, many of them poor and grappling with conflicts at home, have a history of not working much across borders, and security officials say terror groups have used this to avoid capture.

Algeria’s military did not specify when Tamanrasset’s new combined headquarters would be operational, or how many officers would staff it.

A western security official who follows the region closely said enhanced cooperation had been made urgent by several recent cross-border incidents.

In March, army patrols from Algeria and Mali clashed by mistake for several hours near their common border before realizing neither were terror groups, the official said. Speaking on condition of anonymity because he works on intelligence matters, the official said army units in the Sahara sometimes have difficulties knowing which country they are in because there are often no landmarks along the border and they lack radio equipment to link with each other.

An Algerian security official confirmed the incident, which caused several injuries but no casualty. The official, who also spoke anonymously because Algerian law forbids discussing security matters with the media, said the new command center would ensure that patrols on the border combine efforts better.

The new command center aims at much more than just securing the borders, said M’hand Berkouk, a Sahara expert who teaches international relations at Algiers university.

“It’s really the first time in Africa that a sub-region decides to integrate its security operations,” Berkouk said.

The goal will be to launch joint simultaneous operations in partner states and create a common database of terror suspects and traffickers.

Algeria has a large and well-equipped military funded by the country’s oil and gas revenues. Berkouk said the new partnership likely means that less-equipped armies in the poorer countries to its south will receive more training and support.

Born in northern Algeria, AQIM is now viewed as more potent in the country’s far south, where it can rely on fall-back bases and recruits in neighboring Mali, Mauritania and Niger.

The United States and other Western nations have pressed for years for Saharan countries to better cooperate at controlling the desert. AQIM claimed several kidnappings of tourists in the region in recent years, including British hostage Edwin Dyer, who was killed last year when Britain refused to pay a ransom. The group is also blamed for killing a U.S. aid worker in neighboring Mauritania last June.

The U.S. army says it will conduct large-scale training exercises with the military in Mali, Mauritania and other countries next month in the desert.

April 7, 2010

Islamic Televangelists Draw Acolytes, Critics

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July 22, 2005

Religion and television have been a powerful combination in this country, and the same thing is true in the Middle East. Arab channel surfers looking for a dose of Islamic preaching needn’t look far.

Amr Khalid, a 38-year-old former accountant from Egypt, is one of a handful of Islamic televangelists winning converts among young, upper-middle class Arabs. He and others use many of the same techniques used by Christian televangelists in the West.

Threatened by Khalid’s popularity, the Egyptian government banned him from preaching in his own country. He now lives in England, but his satellite TV shows and Internet site are more popular than ever.

March 25, 2010

Libya Releases 214 Islamic Militants

Filed under: Africa,Counterterrorism,Libya,North Africa,Terrorism — mungurk @ 10:31

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Libya Releases 214 Islamic Militants

25/03/2010

TRIPOLI, Libya, (AP) – Libya has released 214 Islamic militants, including senior members of a group accused of plotting to overthrow Moammar Gadhafi, after they renounced violence.

The Libyan leader’s son Seif al-Islam Gadhafi said 34 members of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group, including its leader, were sent home Tuesday after they affirmed they had broken ties with the organization. The group is suspected of having links to al-Qaeda.

“This is an important day for Libya because it is a day of forgiveness and honesty,” the younger Gadhafi said at a news conference Tuesday.

Gadhafi’s son has been leading a dialogue with militants through a rehabilitation program run by his organization, the Gadhafi Foundation.

The efforts are the latest by Arab governments to address militant movements through rehabilitation programs rather than solely through force. Saudi Arabia and Egypt have both pioneered programs to “deprogram” militants and allow them to rejoin society.

“Since the beginning of this program, 705 Islamists have been freed and 409 are still in prison,” Gadhafi said, adding that 232 more will be released after making sure they had fully renounced their past activities.

The Libyan government released 88 Islamic militants in October, including 45 members of the Islamic Fighting Group.

Most of those in Libyan prison are serving sentences of between 10 years and life after being detained in the mid-1990s.

The Libyan Islamic Fighting Group was believed to have joined al-Qaeda’s ranks after a reference was made to them in an audio tape released on the Internet in 2007 by the terror network’s second-in-command, Ayman al-Zawahri.

March 18, 2010

Sahara states say agree joint action against Qaeda

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Tue Mar 16, 2010 10:06pm GMT

By Lamine Chikhi

ALGIERS (Reuters) – Sahara desert states struggling to contain a growing threat from al Qaeda agreed on Tuesday to put aside their differences and hammer out practical ways to fight the insurgents, an Algerian official said.

Western countries say that unless the region’s fractious governments join forces to fight the insurgents, al Qaeda could turn the Sahara desert into a safe haven along the lines of Yemen and Somalia and use it to launch large-scale attacks.

In a move praised in a U.S. State Department statement as a step towards collectively confronting al Qaeda, Algeria hosted foreign and defence ministers from Burkina Faso, Chad, Libya, Mali, Mauritania and Niger for the first conference of its kind.

“We have reached a full consensus to tackle terrorism in the region,” Abdelkader Messahel, Algeria’s Minister Delegate for African and Maghreb Affairs, told reporters after a day of talks behind closed doors in a hotel on the outskirts of Algiers.

“A strategy of action is our choice,” he said. “We will go for action and one step is a meeting between military and anti-terror specialists of the region in Algiers in April.”

That meeting, which Messahel said would be at the level of military chiefs of staff, held out the prospect that Sahara region states would start sharing operational information and cooperating their actions on the ground.

That is a step Western governments say is essential to containing al Qaeda in the Sahara, which has attracted the insurgents with its vast expanses and porous borders. But disagreements have hindered cooperation between states.

Algeria, the region’s dominant economic and military power, is fiercely opposed to Western security forces establishing a presence in the region to counter the militants, but Messahel said the West did have a role.

“We are expecting three things from our international partners: training, equipment and intelligence,” he said.

The State Department statement said it welcomed the decision of Saharan states to meet in the Algerian capital and “collectively confront the threat of terrorism”.

“We hope the meeting will build upon ongoing efforts to strengthen regional cooperation and further consolidate collective action against groups that seek to exploit territories of these countries and launch attacks against innocent civilians,” it said.

Relations between the region’s governments reached a low last month after Mali freed four suspected Islamist militants whose release was demanded by al Qaeda in return for sparing the life of French hostage Pierre Camatte.

Algeria and Mauritania withdrew their ambassadors in Mali in protest and the Algerian government said Mali’s actions were playing into the hands of al Qaeda.

The insurgents last year killed a British hostage, Edwin Dyer. They also shot dead a U.S. aid worker in Mauritania’s capital in June last year, and carried out a suicide bombing on the French embassy there in August that injured three people.

January 14, 2010

Al Qaeda linked to rogue aviation network

Filed under: Africa,Eastern Africa,Middle East,North Africa,Terrorism — mungurk @ 16:04

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Tim Gaynor and Tiemoko Diallo
TIMBUKTU, Mali Thu Jan 14, 2010 3:17pm EST

TIMBUKTU, Mali (Reuters) – In early 2008, an official at the U.S. Department of Homeland Security sent a report to his superiors detailing what he called “the most significant development in the criminal exploitation of aircraft since 9/11.”

World |  Mexico

The document warned that a growing fleet of rogue jet aircraft was regularly crisscrossing the Atlantic Ocean. On one end of the air route, it said, are cocaine-producing areas in the Andes controlled by the leftist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia. On the other are some of West Africa’s most unstable countries.

The report, a copy of which was obtained by Reuters, was ignored, and the problem has since escalated into what security officials in several countries describe as a global security threat.

The clandestine fleet has grown to include twin-engine turboprops, executive jets and retired Boeing 727s that are flying multi-ton loads of cocaine and possibly weapons to an area in Africa where factions of al Qaeda are believed to be facilitating the smuggling of drugs to Europe, the officials say.

Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) has been held responsible for car and suicide bombings in Algeria and Mauritania. Gunmen and bandits linked to the group have also stepped up kidnappings of Europeans, who are then passed on to AQIM factions seeking ransom payments.

The aircraft hopscotch across South American countries, picking up tons of cocaine and jet fuel, officials say. They then soar across the Atlantic to West Africa and the Sahel, where the drugs are funneled across the Sahara Desert and into Europe.

An examination of documents and interviews with officials in the United States and three West African nations suggest that at least 10 aircraft have been discovered using this air route since 2006. Officials warn that many of these aircraft were detected purely by chance. They warn that the real number involved in the networks is likely considerably higher.

Alexandre Schmidt, regional representative for West and Central Africa for the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, cautioned in Dakar this week that the aviation network has expanded in the past 12 months and now likely includes several Boeing 727 aircraft.

“When you have this high capacity for transporting drugs into West Africa, this means that you have the capacity to transport as well other goods, so it is definitely a threat to security anywhere in the world,” said Schmidt. The “other goods” officials are most worried about are weapons that militant organizations can smuggle on the jet aircraft. A Boeing 727 can handle up to 10 tons of cargo.

The U.S. official who wrote the report for the Department of Homeland Security said the al Qaeda connection was unclear at the time. The official is a counter-narcotics aviation expert who asked to remain anonymous as he is not authorized to speak on the record. He said he was dismayed by the lack of attention to the matter since he wrote the report.

“You’ve got an established terrorist connection on this side of the Atlantic. Now on the Africa side you have the al Qaeda connection and it’s extremely disturbing and a little bit mystifying that it’s not one of the top priorities of the government,” he said.

Since the September 11 attacks, the security system for passenger air traffic has been ratcheted up in the United States and throughout much of the rest of the world, with the latest measures imposed just weeks ago after a failed bomb attempt on a Detroit-bound plane on December 25.

“The bad guys have responded with their own aviation network that is out there everyday flying loads and moving contraband,” said the official, “and the government seems to be oblivious to it.”

The upshot, he said, is that militant organizations — including groups like the FARC and al Qaeda — have the “power to move people and material and contraband anywhere around the world with a couple of fuel stops.” The lucrative drug trade is already having a deleterious impact on West African nations. Local authorities told Reuters they are increasingly outgunned and unable to stop the smugglers.

And significantly, many experts say, the drug trafficking is bringing in huge revenues to groups that say they are part of al Qaeda. It’s swelling not just their coffers but also their ranks, they say, as drug money is becoming an effective recruiting tool in some of the world’s most desperately poor regions.

U.S. President Barack Obama has chided his intelligence officials for not pooling information “to connect those dots” to prevent threats from being realized. But these dots, scattered across two continents like flaring traces on a radar screen, remain largely unconnected and the fleets themselves are still flying.

THE AFRICAN CONNECTION

The deadly cocaine trade always follows the money, and its cash-flush traffickers seek out the routes that are the mostly lightly policed. Beset by corruption and poverty, weak countries across West Africa have become staging platforms for transporting between 30 tons and 100 tons of cocaine each year that ends up in Europe, according to U.N. estimates. Drug trafficking, though on a much smaller scale, has existed here and elsewhere on the continent since at least the late 1990s, according to local authorities and U.S. enforcement officials.

Earlier this decade, sea interdictions were stepped up. So smugglers developed an air fleet that is able to transport tons of cocaine from the Andes to African nations that include Mauritania, Mali, Sierra Leone and Guinea Bissau. What these countries have in common are numerous disused landing strips and makeshift runways — most without radar or police presence. Guinea Bissau has no aviation radar at all.

As fleets grew, so, too, did the drug trade.

The DEA says all aircraft seized in West Africa had departed Venezuela. That nation’s location on the Caribbean and Atlantic seaboard of South America makes it an ideal takeoff place for drug flights bound for Africa, they say.

A number of aircraft have been retrofitted with additional fuel tanks to allow in-flight refueling — a technique innovated by Mexico’s drug smugglers. (Cartel pilots there have been known to stretch an aircraft’s flight range by putting a water mattress filled with aviation fuel in the cabin, then stacking cargoes of marijuana bundles on top to act as an improvised fuel pump.)

Ploys used by the cartel aviators to mask the flights include fraudulent pilot certificates, false registration documents and altered tail numbers to steer clear of law enforcement lookout lists, investigators say. Some aircraft have also been found without air-worthiness certificates or log books. When smugglers are forced to abandon them, they torch them to destroy forensic and other evidence like serial numbers.

The evidence suggests that some Africa-bound cocaine jets also file a regional flight plan to avoid arousing suspicion from investigators. They then subsequently change them at the last minute, confident that their switch will go undetected.

One Gulfstream II jet, waiting with its engines running to take on 2.3 tons of cocaine at Margarita Island in Venezuela, requested a last-minute flight plan change to war-ravaged Sierra Leone in West Africa. It was nabbed moments later by Venezuelan troops, the report seen by Reuters showed.

Once airborne, the planes soar to altitudes used by commercial jets. They have little fear of interdiction as there is no long-range radar coverage over the Atlantic. Current detection efforts by U.S. authorities, using fixed radar and P3 aircraft, are limited to traditional Caribbean and north Atlantic air and marine transit corridors.

The aircraft land at airports, disused runways or improvised air strips in Africa. One bearing a false Red Cross emblem touched down without authorization onto an unlit strip at Lungi International Airport in Sierra Leone in 2008, according to a U.N. report.

Late last year a Boeing 727 landed on an improvised runway using the hard-packed sand of a Tuareg camel caravan route in Mali, where local officials said smugglers offloaded between 2 and 10 tons of cocaine before dousing the jet with fuel and burning it after it failed to take off again.

For years, traffickers in Mexico have bribed officials to allow them to land and offload cocaine flights at commercial airports. That’s now happening in Africa as well. In July 2008, troops in coup-prone Guinea Bissau secured Bissau international airport to allow an unscheduled cocaine flight to land, according to Edmundo Mendes, a director with the Judicial Police.

“When we got there, the soldiers were protecting the aircraft,” said Mendes, who tried to nab the Gulfstream II jet packed with an estimated $50 million in cocaine but was blocked by the military. “The soldiers verbally threatened us,” he said.

The cocaine was never recovered. Just last week, Reuters photographed two aircraft at Osvaldo Vieira International Airport in Guinea Bissau — one had been dispatched by traffickers from Senegal to try to repair the other, a Gulfstream II jet, after it developed mechanical problems. Police seized the second aircraft. (To see a graphic on global drug flows, please click on: )

FLYING BLIND

One of the clearest indications of how much this aviation network has advanced was the discovery, on November 2, of the burned out fuselage of an aging Boeing 727. Local authorities found it resting on its side in rolling sands in Mali.

In several ways, the use of such an aircraft marks a significant advance for smugglers. Boeing jetliners, like the one discovered in Mali, can fly a cargo of several tons into remote areas. They also require a three-man crew — a pilot, co pilot and flight engineer, primarily to manage the complex fuel system dating from an era before automation.

Hundreds of miles to the west, in the sultry, former Portuguese colony of Guinea Bissau, national Interpol director Calvario Ahukharie said several abandoned airfields, including strips used at one time by the Portuguese military, had recently been restored by “drug mafias” for illicit flights. “In the past, the planes coming from Latin America usually landed at Bissau airport,” Ahukharie said as a generator churned the feeble air-conditioning in his office during one of the city’s frequent blackouts.

“But now they land at airports in southern and eastern Bissau where the judicial police have no presence.” Ahukharie said drug flights are landing at Cacine, in eastern Bissau, and Bubaque in the Bijagos Archipelago, a chain of more than 80 islands off the Atlantic coast. Interpol said it hears about the flights from locals, although they have been unable to seize aircraft, citing a lack of resources.

The drug trade, by both air and sea, has already had a devastating impact on Guinea Bissau. A dispute over trafficking has been linked to the assassination of the military chief of staff, General Batista Tagme Na Wai in 2009. Hours later, the country’s president, Joao Bernardo Vieira, was hacked to death by machete in his home.

Asked how serious the issue of air trafficking remained for Guinea Bissau, Ahukharie was unambiguous: “The problem is grave.”

The situation is potentially worse in the Sahel-Sahara, where cocaine is arriving by the ton. There it is fed into well-established overland trafficking routes across the Sahara where government influence is limited and where factions of al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb have become increasingly active.

The group, previously known as the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat, is raising millions of dollars from the kidnap of Europeans. Analysts say militants strike deals of convenience with Tuareg rebels and smugglers of arms, cigarettes and drugs. According to a growing pattern of evidence, the group may now be deriving hefty revenues from facilitating the smuggling of FARC-made cocaine to the shores of Europe.

UNHOLY ALLIANCE

In December, Antonio Maria Costa, the executive director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime, told a special session of the UN Security Council that drugs were being traded by “terrorists and anti-government forces” to fund their operations from the Andes, to Asia and the African Sahel.

“In the past, trade across the Sahara was by caravans,” he said. “Today it is larger in size, faster at delivery and more high-tech, as evidenced by the debris of a Boeing 727 found on November 2nd in the Gao region of Mali — an area affected by insurgency and terrorism.”

Just days later, U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration officials arrested three West African men following a sting operation in Ghana. The men, all from Mali, were extradited to New York on December 16 on drug trafficking and terrorism charges.

Oumar Issa, Harouna Toure, and Idriss Abelrahman are accused of plotting to transport cocaine across Africa with the intent to support al Qaeda, its local affiliate AQIM and the FARC. The charges provided evidence of what the DEA’s top official in Colombia described to a Reuters reporter as “an unholy alliance between South American narco-terrorists and Islamic extremists.” Some experts are skeptical, however, that the men are any more than criminals. They questioned whether the drug dealers oversold their al Qaeda connections to get their hands on the cocaine.

In its criminal complaint, the DEA said Toure had led an armed group affiliated to al Qaeda that could move the cocaine from Ghana through North Africa to Spain for a fee of $2,000 per kilo for transportation and protection. Toure discussed two different overland routes with an undercover informant. One was through Algeria and Morocco; the other via Algeria to Libya. He told the informer that the group had worked with al Qaeda to transport between one and two tons of hashish to Tunisia, as well as smuggle Pakistani, Indian and Bangladeshi migrants into Spain.

In any event, AQIM has been gaining in notoriety. Security analysts warn that cash stemming from the trans-Saharan coke trade could transform the organization — a small, agile group whose southern-Sahel wing is estimated to number between 100 and 200 men — into a more potent threat in the region that stretches from Mauritania to Niger. It is an area with huge foreign investments in oil, mining and a possible trans-Sahara gas pipeline.

“These groups are going to have a lot more money than they’ve had before, and I think you are going to see them with much more sophisticated weapons,” said Douglas Farah, a senior fellow at the International Assessment Strategy Center, a Washington based security think-tank.

NARCOTIC INDUSTRIAL DEPOT

The Timbuktu region covers more than a third of northern Mali, where the parched, scrubby Sahel shades into the endless, rolling dunes of the Sahara Desert. It is an area several times the size of Switzerland, much of it beyond state control.

Moulaye Haidara, the customs official, said the sharp influx of cocaine by air has transformed the area into an “industrial depot” for cocaine. Sitting in a cool, dark, mud-brick office building in the city where nomadic Tuareg mingle with Arabs and African Songhay, Fulani and Mande peoples, Haidara expresses alarm at the challenge local law enforcement faces.

Using profits from the trade, the smugglers have already bought “automatic weapons, and they are very determined,” Haidara said. He added that they “call themselves Al Qaeda,” though he believes the group had nothing to do with religion, but used it as “an ideological base.”

Local authorities say four-wheel-drive Toyota SUVs outfitted with GPS navigation equipment and satellite telephones are standard issue for smugglers. Residents say traffickers deflate the tires to gain better traction on the loose Saharan sands, and can travel at speeds of up to 70 miles-per-hour in convoys along routes to North Africa.

Timbuktu governor, Colonel Mamadou Mangara, said he believes traffickers have air-conditioned tents that enable them to operate in areas of the Sahara where summer temperatures are so fierce that they “scorch your shoes.” He added that the army lacked such equipment.

A growing number of people in the impoverished region, where transport by donkey cart and camel are still common, are being drawn to the trade. They can earn 4 to 5 million CFA Francs (roughly $9-11,000) on just one coke run. “Smuggling can be attractive to people here who can make only $100 or $200 a month,” said Mohamed Ag Hamalek, a Tuareg tourist guide in Timbuktu, whose family until recently earned their keep hauling rock salt by camel train, using the stars to navigate the Sahara.

Haidara described northern Mali as a no-go area for the customs service. “There is now a red line across northern Mali, nobody can go there,” he said, sketching a map of the country on a scrap of paper with a ballpoint pen. “If you go there with feeble means … you don’t come back.”

TWO-WAY TRADE

Speaking in Dakar this week, Schmidt, the U.N. official, said that growing clandestine air traffic required urgent action on the part of the international community.

“This should be the highest concern for governments … For West African countries, for West European countries, for Russia and the U.S., this should be very high on the agenda,” he said.

Stopping the trade, as the traffickers are undoubtedly aware, is a huge challenge — diplomatically, structurally and economically.

Venezuela, the takeoff or refueling point for aircraft making the trip, has a confrontational relationship with Colombia, where President Alvaro Uribe has focused on crushing the FARC’s 45-year-old insurgency. The nation’s leftist leader, Hugo Chavez, won’t allow in the DEA to work in the country.

In a measure of his hostility to Washington, he scrambled two F16 fighter jets last week to intercept an American P3 aircraft — a plane used to seek out and track drug traffickers — which he said had twice violated Venezuelan airspace. He says the United States and Colombia are using anti-drug operations as a cover for a planned invasion of his oil-rich country. Washington and Bogota dismiss the allegation.

In terms of curbing trafficking, the DEA has by far the largest overseas presence of any U.S. federal law enforcement, with 83 offices in 62 countries. But it is spread thin in Africa where it has just four offices — in Nigeria, Ghana, Egypt and South Africa — though there are plans to open a fifth office in Kenya.

Law enforcement agencies from Europe as well as Interpol are also at work to curb the trade. But locally, officials are quick to point out that Africa is losing the war on drugs.

The most glaring problem, as Mali’s example shows, is a lack of resources. The only arrests made in connection with the Boeing came days after it was found in the desert — and those incarcerated turned out to be desert nomads cannibalizing the plane’s aluminum skin, probably to make cooking pots. They were soon released.

Police in Guinea Bissau, meanwhile, told Reuters they have few guns, no money for gas for vehicles given by donor governments and no high security prison to hold criminals.

Corruption is also a problem. The army has freed several traffickers charged or detained by authorities seeking to tackle the problem, police and rights groups said.

Serious questions remain about why Malian authorities took so long to report the Boeing’s discovery to the international law enforcement community.

What is particularly worrying to U.S. interests is that the networks of aircraft are not just flying one way — hauling coke to Africa from Latin America — but are also flying back to the Americas.

The internal Department of Homeland Security memorandum reviewed by Reuters cited one instance in which an aircraft from Africa landed in Mexico with passengers and unexamined cargo.

The Gulfstream II jet arrived in Cancun, by way of Margarita Island, Venezuela, en route from Africa. The aircraft, which was on an aviation watch list, carried just two passengers. One was a U.S. national with no luggage, the other a citizen of the Republic of Congo with a diplomatic passport and a briefcase, which was not searched.

“The obvious huge concern is that you have a transportation system that is capable of transporting tons of cocaine from west to east,” said the aviation specialist who wrote the Homeland Security report. “But it’s reckless to assume that nothing is coming back, and when there’s terrorist organizations on either side of this pipeline, it should be a high priority to find out what is coming back on those airplanes.”

(Additional reporting by Tiemoko Diallo in Mali, Alberto Dabo in Guinea Bissau and Hugh Bronstein in Colombia, editing by Jim Impoco and Claudia Parsons)

January 7, 2010

Algeria links anonymous SIM cards to terrorism

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The Algerian government has intensified its crackdown against the use of anonymous mobile phone SIM cards after it found terrorists used unidentifiable chips to communicate and coordinate attacks in the country.

Subscriber Identity Module (SIM) on cards store a specific service subscriber key from the operator to identify each user.  In the past, Algerian mobile operators sold SIM cards that couldn’t be identified, creating a security risk.

The Magharebia website, which is sponsored by the military United States Africa Command, reported that about 95 attacks have been carried out over the last three years using anonymous SIM cards. And, according to daily Tout sur l’Algerie, they are now classified as ‘sensitive equipment’

In March 2008, the Algerian government ordered domestic mobile phone companies to stop selling anonymous mobile phones and SIM cards. Algerian operators including Mobilis and Nedjma were told to identify every subscriber by April 20th that year or have the unidentified accounts blocked automatically.

The news came as council chief for the Algerian Regulatory Authority for Post and Telecommunications Mohamed Belfodil revealed at a forum last year that out of 28 million mobile subscribers in the country, 10 to 15% have not been identified.

Published January 4, 2010

December 10, 2009

AQIM declining, but troubling — scholar

Filed under: Africa,Eastern Africa,Middle East,North Africa,Terrorism — mungurk @ 13:21

source

Published: Dec. 8, 2009 at 6:16 PM

WASHINGTON, Dec. 8 (UPI) — Though largely contained, al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb poses a unique threat to North Africa that requires international attention, a scholar says.

AQIM is an Algerian affiliate of al-Qaida that pledged allegiance to Osama bin Laden in 2006. The group has a global reputation for ferocity and maintains much of its leadership structure.

The group, however, has failed to spread much beyond the region. Nevertheless, writes Jean-Pierre Filiu, a professor at the Paris Institute of Political Studies, the group requires international attention in order to contain the threat.

Filiu, writing for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, warns that AQIM’s decline may encourage the broader al-Qaida organization to intensify its efforts in the region.

“The security paradox posed by AQIM is that its inability to project its ‘global’ terror beyond Africa intensifies the pressures from al-Qaida central to achieve such a breakthrough and to force the Algerian jihadi leadership to live up to this commitment,” he warns.

Meanwhile, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton met with her Algerian counterpart, Mourad Medelci, to discuss cooperation on counter-terrorism efforts.

“We have talked about peace in the world, so therefore we haven’t excluded any issue that has to do with peace,” the Algerian minister said in statements to the media.

November 24, 2009

Al Qaeda Deploying Iraq War Veterans Into Algeria

Filed under: Africa,Algeria,Iraq,Middle East,Terrorism — mungurk @ 10:06

source

2009-11-20

Algerian militants who fought in Iraq are joining AQIM upon their return, warn Algerian security experts.

By Safa Salah Eddine for Magharebia in Algiers – 20/11/09

The al-Qaeda Organisation in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) is recruiting militants who fought in the Iraq war, according to Algeria’s local press and security sources.

Sixty fighters have been recruited from Oued Souf, Batna and Msila following their return to Algeria, the Arabic-language daily Ennahar claimed in a November 11th article. However, security sources who spoke with Magharebia put the number at 56, and say small groups of five or six have been returning to the bush since 2007.

Military sources confirmed that the majority of the combatants recruited for AQIM – formerly known as the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) – hail from Oued Souf. Several students are believed to be among the recruits.

“These individuals can be very dangerous in more ways than one, because they have acquired considerable experience on the ground and have knowledge that [AQIM] stands to benefit greatly from,” said Hichem A., a journalist who specialises in security issues.

An Algerian military source with experience in counter-terrorism said the recruits could “serve as a prop for Droukdel’s criminal organisation.”

“They can contribute strategic support and contribute to an overhaul of AQIM, which would change the current situation, especially since further attacks cannot yet be ruled out,” said the source, adding, “This organisation, which deals in violence and devastation, is capable of causing more surprises.”

There are also concerns that Libyan terrorist networks are funnelling militants from Iraq into the Algerian bush. Algerian Interior Minister Noureddine Yazid Zerhouni warned as early as 2008 that foreigners were joining AQIM ranks with the help of the “king of the desert”, Mokhtar Ben Mokhtar, a criminal kingpin who specialises in smuggling people and weapons.

Zerhouni claimed that 40 AQIM militants were originally from Libya, Tunisia, Mali and Morocco.

To counter AQIM’s recruitment drive, Algerian and Iraqi leaders will soon co-operate by sharing counter-terrorism information. Morocco and Algeria have also agreed to work together and share their knowledge.

“I think it’s to be expected that these young men who have returned from a war will head off to the bush,” said a psychologist who works with jailed terrorists. “Several terrorists who are being treated here have managed to re-establish their links with other terrorists despite being imprisoned, and went back down the road of resistance after being lucky enough to be among those to benefit from the laws on the Charter for Peace and National Reconciliation.”

“These individuals have lost all concept of life,” said the psychologist. “Now they hide out in the bush, where they only know the law of violence – so inevitably, they’ve become addicted to blood.”

However, some experts are confident that AQIM is weakening, and cannot meet its goals even by finding new recruits.

“[AQIM] continues to menace parts of the Maghreb and the Sahel but has failed to meet its objectives,” the co-ordinator for counter-terrorism at the US Department of State on Tuesday, Daniel Benjamin, said on Tuesday.

“[AQIM] is financially strapped, especially in Algeria, and is incapable of achieving its objectives in terms of recruitment,” added Benjamin.

November 17, 2009

Islamic militants boosting role in drug trade

source

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

By Claude Salhani THE WASHINGTON TIMES

The sea lanes of the South Atlantic have become a favored route for drug traffickers carrying narcotics from Latin America to West and North Africa, where al Qaeda-related groups are increasingly involved in transporting the drugs to Europe, intelligence officials and counternarcotics specialists say.

A Middle Eastern intelligence official said his agency has picked up “very worrisome reports” of rapidly growing cooperation between Islamic militants operating in North and West Africa and drug lords in Latin America. With U.S. attention focused on the Caribbean and Africans lacking the means to police their shores, the vast sea lanes of the South Atlantic are wide open to illegal navigation, the official said.

“The South Atlantic has become a no-man’s sea,” said the official, speaking on the condition of anonymity owing to the nature of his work.

A spokesman for the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) confirmed the new route.

“The Colombians have shifted their focus from sending cocaine through the Caribbean, and they saw an opportunity to sell cocaine in Europe, transshipping it through the South Atlantic from Venezuela and then to Africa, through Spain and into Europe,” DEA spokesman Michael Sanders told The Washington Times. “That’s what we’re seeing. It’s just a new location. That’s the route they’re taking, for the most part.”

The Washington Times reported in March that Hezbollah, an Iran-backed Lebanese Shi’ite group, is deeply involved in the drug trade. Increasingly, however, Sunni groups linked to al Qaeda are also dealing in narcotics to finance their organizations, specialists say.

“It’s a weapon against the infidels in the West,” said Chris Brown, a senior research associate at the Potomac Institute outside Washington. “As long as the target of the drug trade is the infidels, they have no problem doing it.”

Concerns center on groups such as al Qaeda in the Maghreb (AQIM), which operates primarily in Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. North African officials say they worry that AQIM is amassing large sums of money from the drug trade to use in financing attacks, with the object of frightening away tourists, undercutting local economies and, ultimately, secular regimes.

Much of the drug trafficking passes through Venezuela, said Jaime Daremblum, the director of the Center for Latin American Studies at the Hudson Institute and a former Costa Rican ambassador to the United States.

“Caracas has become the cathedral of narco-traffickers,” he said.

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