Signal, No Noise

September 1, 2010

Saudi Arabia Crushing Political Opposition in Name of Counterterrorism

Filed under: Counterterrorism,Middle East,Saudi Arabia,Terrorism — mungurk @ 10:28

source

Riyadh reportedly crushing dissent

Published: Aug. 31, 2010 at 1:54 PM

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia, Aug. 31 (UPI) — A crackdown in Saudi Arabia on Islamic militancy is used as a pretense to arrest dissidents seeking political reform, opponents said.

Washington praised Saudi Arabia for rounding up scores of Islamic militants in the years since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks on the United States.

Critics, however, said the ruling monarchy is using the crackdown as an excuse to silence opposition forces in the kingdom, The Wall Street Journal reports.

Mohammad al-Qahtani, who represents detained dissident and former Judge Suliman al-Reshoudi, complained the monarchy was using the fight against terrorism as an excuse.

“Using the anti-terror campaign has been the conspicuous Saudi policy to arrest and harass political reformists and human-rights activists,” he told the Journal. “It is a serious threat to those dedicated to nonviolent change in the nation.”

Lawyers have sued the Saudi interior ministry for what they say was the arbitrary arrest of the former judge, who is still held without charge more than three years after his arrest. The U.S. State Department, meanwhile, mentioned Reshoudi’s name in its write-up on human rights in Saudi Arabia.

The interior minister threw out the case, however, and the Saudi government told the Journal it wouldn’t comment on ongoing internal matters.

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)

August 26, 2010

Airport Check-in: LAX security concerns raised by police group

Filed under: Americas,Counterterrorism,North America,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 10:10

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By Ben Mutzabaugh, USA TODAY

From USA TODAY’s Airport Check-in column: Local lawmakers in Los Angeles want to review security policies at Los Angeles International Airport after a police group said the airport is vulnerable to terrorist attacks and other crimes.

In June, the Los Angeles Airport Peace Officers Association sent a letter to Airport Police Chief George Centeno, expressing concern that cuts in the airport’s police personnel, training and equipment budget were compromising its security. The letter was leaked to the local press.

Earlier this month, L.A. City Councilwoman Janice Hahn, who chairs a committee that’s looking into the claims, said she wanted a security audit of the airport. Other state and local lawmakers have also called for an investigation.

LAX defended its security record, releasing a statement last week that showed the number of crimes at the airport fell 6% to 1,146 cases in the first six months of the year.

“LAX continues to be one of the safest airports in the world and one of the safest areas in all of Southern California,” Centeno said in a statement. “The total number of major crimes against persons is remarkably low, given over 28.7 million travelers used LAX the first half of this year.”

The airport has said its budget has tripled in recent years to about $100 million annually, while the number of officers has grown to 447 from 263 in 2002.

Marshall McClain, president of the Los Angeles Airport Peace Officers Association, says he wrote the letter to urge the airport police to beef up staffing and budget given LAX’s size and growth ambition. “It’s a difference of opinion on the numbers,” he says, adding that officers total 423. “We have grown in size. That’s never been an issue. The issue is we want to do more with more. We want to ensure that as the airport grows, the (number of) officers grows as well.”

August 24, 2010

German man faces terrorism charges in US plot

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BERLIN—German prosecutors say they have charged a man with membership in a group that plotted to attack U.S. targets in the European country.

Prosecutors announced Monday the man identified only as Salih S. was charged Aug. 12 with supporting a terrorist organization and membership in a terrorist organization.

They say the German citizen is alleged to be a member of the radical Islamic Jihad Union who trained at a terrorist camp in Pakistan. He was first arrested in 2008 in Turkey and extradited in July.

Salih S. is accused of procuring GPS devices, night vision goggles and other items for Adem Yilmaz

Yilmaz was convicted with three others earlier this year of plotting a thwarted attack that a judge said could have killed large numbers of U.S. soldiers and civilians.

Copyright 2010 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

August 23, 2010

Airport Security Not So Secure? If Drug, Immigrant Smugglers Can Exploit System, So Can Terrorists

Filed under: Americas,Counterterrorism,Drugs,North America,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 10:18

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Airport Security Not So Secure?

If Drug, Immigrant Smugglers Can Exploit System, So Can Terrorists

By PIERRE THOMAS and JEAN SHIN

Aug. 22, 2010

A recent spate of airport security breaches, with airline or airport employees allegedly involved in smuggling drugs or illegal immigrants, have federal officials concerned.

Federal authorities warn crimes by airport workers are not isolated.

Just last week at Miami International Airport, eight cargo workers were charged with being part of a conspiracy that smuggled a half ton of cocaine and heroin from Central and South America to U.S. streets on scores of flights.

"They knew how to exploit that system because they worked there," said Anthony Mangione, Special Agent in Charge of the Homeland Security Investigations office in Miami. "The person within the system knows the strengths of it and knows the weaknesses and like anything else, will target those weaknesses."

If you thought nine years after 9/11 that corruption at the nation's airports would have been rooted out or dramatically reduced, think again.

In another breach in 2008, airport authorities and federal officials got a tip that drugs were being smuggled out of John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City, leading to the arrest of two American Airline employees.

In exclusive surveillance video obtained by ABC News of the drug bust, we see how airline employees can circumvent the system and elude security checks.

In the video, one of the suspects pulls up on the tarmac at JFK airport in a baggage car. Seconds later, in a perfectly synchronized act, another airport employee arrives in another truck and retrieves a package full of several thousand dollars

The two employees involved have since been convicted.

PHOTO Recent security breaches at airports across the country have law enforcement and security officials concerned.

Recent security breaches at airports across the country have law enforcement and security officials concerned.

(ABC News)

Corruption at the airports is not just confined to narcotics smuggling. In addition to reports of several airports employing illegal immigrants, airport employees have been accused of smuggling illegal immigrants into the United States.

An elevator mechanic at Los Angeles International Airport was arrested and charged for smuggling at least 15 illegal immigrants into the country from Mexico.

June 14, 2010

Two People with weapons detained at MacDill AFB

Filed under: Americas,Counterterrorism,North America,Terrorism,USA — mungurk @ 23:18

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2 people detained with weapons at MacDill AFB

The Associated Press

Posted on Monday, 06.14.10

TAMPA, Fla. — Two heavily armed people were detained after reportedly trying to enter MacDill Air Force Base without authorization.

The MacDill public affairs office reports that a man and woman, whose names were not released, tried to gain unauthorized access to base early Monday evening.

The man and woman were unable to show proper identification, and their vehicle was inspected. Security forces found military-style gear and weapons in the sport utility vehicle.

The base’s fire department and explosive ordnance disposal units were dispatched, but no explosives were found.

The individuals were taken in custody.

The incident remained under investigation.

The base’s public affairs officer said no other information was available.


June 12, 2010

Ten Yemen soldiers hurt in raid on militant

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Ten Yemen soldiers hurt in raid on militant

(AFP) – 3 days ago

SANAA — Ten soldiers and four civilians were wounded in clashes Wednesday as the Yemeni army tried to arrest an Al-Qaeda suspect over last week’s murder of a top officer, tribal and medical sources said.

The troops raided the home of Hassan Abdullah Saleh al-Uqaily in Al-Himma, east of the capital Sanaa, using tank guns in an attempt to arrest him, a tribal source said.

The suspect managed to escape but clashes broke out with a group of his supporters during which 10 soldiers were wounded, a medical official said.

Four civilians were also wounded, a tribal source and witnesses said.

Uqaily’s home was completely destroyed in the clashes which lasted for several hours before subsiding, the tribal source said

Colonel Mohammed Saleh al-Shaief and two of his bodyguards were killed on Saturday when Al-Qaeda militants opened fire on their convoy south of the eastern city of Marib, military and tribal sources said.

Shaief was travelling in a convoy to inspect military forces stationed in the Safar oilfield when the attack occurred south of Marib, the sources added.

A local source identified Uqaily — a 28-year-old on a government wanted list — as the one who led the attack.

On Monday, a man suspected of being an Al-Qaeda militant behind a 2007 bombing that killed eight Spanish tourists surrendered to Yemeni authorities, the defence ministry’s 26sep.net news website reported.

Hamza Ali Saleh al-Dhayani’s “surrender (on Sunday) comes after the tightening of the noose on Al-Qaeda members” in Marib province and “painful blows they have received,” 26sep.net quoted Marib’s governor as saying.

Another, Ghalib al-Zaidi, gave himself up to authorities in the province on Saturday, a security official had told AFP.

Marib, east of the capital Sanaa, is one of Al-Qaeda’s strongholds in Yemen.

Yemen is the ancestral homeland of Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and has been the scene of several attacks claimed by the group on foreign missions, tourist sites and oil installations.

Al-Qaeda has suffered setbacks amid US pressure on the government to crack down, but attacks by the group continue.

Yemeni forces have stepped up the hunt for Al-Qaeda suspects ever since the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) claimed responsibility for a failed Christmas airliner bomb plot over Detroit in the United States.

Copyright © 2010 AFP. All rights reserved.

Mumbai Police on alert over plot to free Kasab

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Mumbai Police on alert over plot to free Kasab
Headlines Today Bureau
Mumbai, June 10, 2010

The Mumbai Police has issued an alert after a tip-off from central agencies that terrorists might try to secure the release of 26/11 case convict Ajmal Kasab.

The police have received an alert that terrorists might attempt to hijack a plane and take hostages to press for Kasab’s release.

The alert warned that the hijacking attempt could be made over the next 10 days.

On May 6, Kasab was sentenced to death by the trial court for his role in the November 2008 Mumbai terror attacks. He has appealed against the verdict in the Bombay High Court.

June 7, 2010

Iranian Caught Smuggling Sniper Rifles Across Canadian Border

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Media ignore Iranian caught smuggling arsenal of sniper rifles across border

June 6, 10:54 AMConservative ExaminerRobert Moon

An illegal immigrant from Iran named Hamid Malekpour was discovered last month smuggling a huge load of sniper rifles and high-powered weaponry across the Canadian border into Washington State. He has since been arrested and charged with entering the country illegally with firearms and ammunition, as well as filing a false report with a federal agency.

It has been covered locally and by some bloggers, but that’s pretty much it.

From the Yamhill Valley News Register:

[Agents] found a .50-caliber sniper rifle, two .308-caliber sniper rifles, three .300-caliber sniper rifles, eight law enforcement style .223-caliber rifles, three Glock semi-automatic handguns, 100 .223-caliber magazines, 3,800 rounds of .223-caliber ammunition, various high-powered scopes and other equipment.

[Sheriff] Crabtree marveled at the find. ‘Have you ever seen a .50-caliber round?’ he asked. ‘That’s a big round — the stuff you shoot at airplanes and tanks.’

The only reason Malekpour was caught was that he became sloppy–and that he entered the country from Canada, where the border is at least somewhat controlled.

He repeatedly crossed the border and took trips back and forth to Iran under different aliases, while using a phony gun dealership as a front for his operations called, “McMinnville Hunting & Police Supplies Inc.”–an obscure, shuttered office with no signs that the local police had never heard of, which had a bogus, half-constructed web site and an expired business license.

He was also caught in a number of lies about everything from his passport to why he was entering the country.

Again, even a broken clock is still right twice per day. Eventually, we’re going to have to rely on something more than the persistent incompetence of those seeking to mass-murder us.

Pakistan Terrorists may target minorities in another attack

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By Express APPMay 30, 2010

LAHOREInterior Minister Rehman Malik said that intelligence information was warned of another terror attack on other minorities.

Talking to the media in Lahore, he said that terrorists hiding in South Punjab have started to come out in the open. The Interior Minister said that the banned outfits of Lashkar-e-Jhangvi and Jash-e-Muhammad are part of TTP and Al-Qaeda, adding that 29 banned organizations have been supporting terrorists inside the country.

He also condemned the terrorist attacks on two places of worship of the Ahmedi community on Friday, adding that it is state’s responsibility to protect the minorities.

Jammat-i-Ahmedia’s demand for security

The Jammat-i-Ahmedia demanded that the government provide security to the Ahmedi minority sect on Sunday.

Addressing a press conference in Lahore director Anjuman-i-Ahmedia Mirza Ghulam Ahmed said that they did not demand compensation from the government but it was the duty of the government to protect them.

He said that in Model Town the CCTV cameras installed in the worship place did not work due to loadshedding. However, the CCTV footage of the Garhi Shaho attack was handed over to the police. He said that security was not sufficient in both worship places and only 4 policemen were deployed.

He also said that the banners were displayed against their community at Mall Road and Garhi Shaho. Jamat Ahmadiyya Spokesman Ghulam Ahmad said that the government had taken Friday’s terror attacks very seriously. He was talking to media in Lahore.

Earlier, the Punjab Police claimed to have made headway in the investigation of terror attacks on Ahmedis worship places during Friday prayers.

Briefing the media at Central Police Office, the Punjab Police Spokesman DIG Akram Naeem Bharokah said the police arrested two terrorists from Model Town, namely Abdullah alias Muhammad son of Atta Ullah Chachar of Saje Village Rahim Yar Khan, and Muaz in injured condition while two terrorists Mansoor and Durwaish were killed during police encounter at Garhi Shahu.

It was disclosed in the preliminary investigation, he said, all the four terrorists were teenagers having links with Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan, while a militant trainer Muneeb trained all of them at Miran Shah, North Waziristan Agency. Bharokah said the terrorists came to Lahore from Miran Shah via Bannu district through a public bus on May 21 and stayed in Braili Mosque near Batti Chowk.

The same day they divided into two groups and conducted reconnaissance of their respective targets under the guidance of their accomplices over here. Later,they kept on changing their hide-outs. On May 28, their local accomplices dropped Abdullah and Muaz at 87C Model Town, and Mansoor and Durwaish at Ahmed is Jamaat Khana in Garhi Shahu, besides providing them ammunition, hand grenades and explosive jackets at around 1:30pm.

Both the groups attacked their targets at around 1:35pm when the Ahmedis were busy in their adoration, killing 52 people in Garhi Shahu and 27 in Model Town. While 107 people received injuries- 73 in Garhi Shahu and 34 in Model Town, he maintained. The DIG said the terrorists also inflicted bullet injuries to nine policemen including an SP and ASP of Civil Lines Police at Garhi Shahu and an Inspector at Model Town.

To a question, he said, the terrorist network is very complex and they organize different groups for different targets, therefore, it will be pre-mature to talk about presence of other terrorists in the Punjab capital city.However, the initial investigation would prove to be veryhelpful to trace and dismantle the terrorists network, he added.

He said, the police also recovered 18 grenade, 19 detonators, four kilograms explosive, one full live explosive jacket and one half live jacket, one bull action kalashnikov,55 live bullets, seven magazines, 177 bullet rounds, six primacards from the terrorists at 87C Model Town, and two kalashnikovs and four hand grenades at Garhi Shahu.

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