Islamist Wave 2013 - Overview & Updates

10 posts

Randall McMurphy
The Blue Laws were and are, democratically unpopular, but voting is rallying interest groups, and if your team has the Sunday monopoly, all is cool. Border liquor stores supply kickbacks. Kickbacks was how and is how the system worked. I am not making a judgement, only pointing out the esoteric logic for the laws was to prevent politics in beer halls particularly on leisure Sundays, and now, just another racket.

Go look at Pennsylvania's alcohol laws--they are ancient--can't buy a 6 pack, must buy 24--who does that actually serve?
Randall McMurphy
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The pledge of allegiance, before the NSDAP made things more complicated...who made who?
Niccolo and Donkey
How Tunisia is turning into a Salafist battleground

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Angocachi
The trend in Jihadist news this summer is of a continuing spread of Salafist attacks, while at the same time violent divisions arising between Jihadists.


35 Killed in East Turkestan, PRC blames Syrian rebels for training Uighur Jihadists

BEIJING (Reuters) - Chinese state media on Monday blamed Syrian opposition forces in unusually specific finger pointing for training Muslim extremists responsible for the deadliest unrest in four years in China 's far-western region of Xinjiang .
China has traditionally blamed violence in Xinjiang, home to Muslim Uighurs, on Islamic separatists who want to establish an independent state of " East Turkestan ".
This appears to mark the first time Beijing has blamed a group in Syria and fits a common narrative of the government portraying Xinjiang's violence as coming from abroad, such as Pakistan, and not due to homegrown anger.
Chinese President Xi Jinping presided over a forum in Beijing last Saturday on maintaining stability in Xinjiang. Paramilitary police have flooded the streets of the regional capital Urumqi after 35 people were killed in two attacks last week, which China has blamed on a gang engaged in "religious extremist activities".
Many Uighurs in Xinjiang resent what they call Chinese government restrictions on their culture, language and religion.
The Global Times, a tabloid owned by the Communist Party mouthpiece, the People's Daily, said that some members of the East Turkestan faction had moved from Turkey into Syria.
"This Global Times reporter has recently exclusively learned from the Chinese anti-terrorism authorities that since 2012, some members of the 'East Turkestan' faction have entered Syria from Turkey, participated in extremist, religious and terrorist organizations within the Syrian opposition forces and fought against the Syrian army," the newspaper said.
"At the same time, these elements from 'East Turkestan' have identified candidates to sneak into Chinese territory to plan and execute terrorist attacks."
Authorities had arrested a 23-year-old "terrorist", known in Chinese as Maimaiti Aili, belonging to the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), the report said, adding that he had taken part in the Syrian war.
Dilxat Raxit, the Sweden-based spokesman for the exiled World Uyghur Congress, called the report unrealistic.
"Uighurs already find it very difficult to get passports, how can they run off to Syria?" Raxit told Reuters by telephone.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying declined to directly answer questions on whether Syrian rebels had joined forces with the East Turkestan movement.
Hua only said at a regular briefing that China has "also noted that in recent years East Turkestan terrorist forces and international terrorist organizations have been uniting, not only threatening China's national security but also the peace and stability of relevant countries and regions."
Officials in Xinjiang and China's ministry of public security were not immediately available for comment.
Pan Zhiping, a retired expert on Central Asia at Xinjiang's Academy of Social Science, said it was possible that the attackers in Xinjiang were involved in the Syrian war, citing members of the East Turkestan movement who had taken part in the Chechnya war, and were extradited by Russia to go on trial in China.
"They are definitely more dangerous, these people, we can call them desperados. They are highly trained and not ordinary citizens," Pan said.
The report by the Global Times follows attempts by China to take a more proactive role in solving the crisis in Syria. China, a permanent member of the U.N. Security Council, has been keen to show it is not taking sides and has urged the Syrian government to talk to the opposition.
Police in Xinjiang have detained 19 people for spreading online rumors that triggered Wednesday's attack in northern Shanshan county, state media said on Monday.
The increased security comes four days before the fourth anniversary of the July 2009 riots in Xinjiang that pitted Uighurs against ethnic Chinese, resulting in nearly 200 people being killed.
Two days after the deadly attack, more than 100 people riding motorbikes and wielding knives attacked a police station in Xinjiang, state media reported.
(Reporting by Sui-Lee Wee, Michael Martina and Li Hui; Editing by Nick Macfie)
http://news.yahoo.com/china-state-media-blames-syria-government-rebel-forces-052003358.html









Al Shabaab extremists kill two of their chiefs

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© AFP
Somalia’s al Shabaab extremists have killed two of their own co-founders, the al Qaeda-linked group told the AFP on Saturday. The pair killed included a man with a $5 million United States bounty on his head.



By News Wires (text)


Somalia ’s al Qaeda-linked al Shabaab extremists have killed two of their own top commanders, one with a $5 million United States bounty on his head, the insurgents said Saturday.
“We have informed their widows of their deaths, as they must now wear the clothes of mourning,” al Shabaab spokesman Abdulaziz Abu Musab told AFP.
The pair killed are two co-founders of the Islamist group, including US-wanted Ibrahim Haji Jama Mead, better known by his nickname Al-Afghani—“the Afghan”, due to his training and fighting with Islamist guerrillas there.
Washington offered a $5 million bounty for Afghani, who opposed the command of top al Shabaab leader Ahmed Abdi Godane.
Godane earlier this month ordered Afghani and other leaders’ arrest.
Al Shabaab gunmen also killed Abul Hamid Hashi Olhayi, named as another senior commander and co-founder of the group.
Family members said they were arrested and then executed, but the al Shabaab said they were killed during a gun battle.
“We deny reports that the men were killed after capture,” Musab told AFP. “The two men were killed in a shoot out when they were resisting arrest on court orders.”
Somalia’s al Shabaab is fractured into multiple rival factions, some based along clan lines and others ideological.
Some are more attracted by a nationalist agenda to oust foreigners from Somalia, while others—including Godane—have more international jihadi ambitions.
However, despite its divisions, analysts say it remains a dangerous and powerful force.
Afghani formerly headed the extremist group’s forces in southern Somalia’s Lower Juba region, based in the strategic port city of Kismayo.
In April, a letter was circulated on extremist websites reportedly penned by Afghani to al Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, criticising the leadership of Godane.
Security sources report that clashes broke out between Godane’s troops and forces loyal to Afghani on June 20 in the southern Somali port of Barawe, one of the few towns still held by the al Qaeda-linked insurgents.
After the fighting in Barawe in which Afghani was captured, factions opposed to Godane have scattered.

http://www.france24.com/en/20130630...a-islamist-extremists-kill-two-top-commanders








HAT YAI, Thailand — Seven soldiers were killed Saturday in a roadside bomb attack in southern Thailand , where insurgents have been active for years, the police said.

Col. Metha Singhasena, a police official, said a group of attackers, suspected of being insurgents, detonated the bomb on a rural road in the Krong Pinang district in Yala Province as military vehicles were passing by.
He said 10 soldiers were on a multipurpose truck and an armored personnel vehicle after finishing a patrol early Saturday.
An improvised bomb, hidden under the surface of the road, destroyed the truck and killed seven soldiers, Colonel Metha said. Two officers and a villager were wounded in the attack, and one soldier was missing.
More than 5,000 people have been killed in Thailand’s three southernmost, Muslim-majority provinces since an Islamic insurgency erupted in 2004. The rest of the country is largely Buddhist.
Attacks occur almost daily despite the government’s efforts to engage in talks with the Muslim rebels. This month, the Thai government and Muslim separatist negotiators said they hoped to curb violence in the region during Ramadan, the coming Muslim fasting month.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/30/world/asia/attack-on-soldiers-kills-7-in-thailand.html?_r=0
Niccolo and Donkey

Civil war is brewing.

With Morsi’s grip on power slipping, Muslim Brotherhood prepares a defense force

Niccolo and Donkey

From today:

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Angocachi

The biggest news in Islamism in the last 20 years.

Cairo - The fireworks celebrating Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi’s removal by the military are visible a few kilometres away, where thousands of his supporters are holding a sit-in, a protest they plan to continue until Morsi is reinstated.

Hours after his removal, the mood at the rally, outside a mosque in Cairo’s Nasr City neighbourhood, was sombre and confused.

Supporters of Morsi and his Muslim Brotherhood wondered how the man who last year became Egypt’s first democratically-elected president could be ousted so ignominiously.

Fear hovered over the rally, too, with many Brotherhood members wondering if Morsi’s removal would portend a wider crackdown on the once-banned group.
The army has encircled the site of the protest, blocking main roads with barbed wire and armoured vehicles; helicopters buzz overhead, often to jeers and curses from below. One man spat at a helicopter, dismissing its pilots as traitors.

Rumours were rife in the early hours of Thursday morning that the army would soon raid the camp and detain the protesters. One man brought up the memory of 1954, when then-president Gamal Abdel Nasser crushed the Brotherhood, jailing thousands of its members.

"What the army did, they have unleashed hell on Egypt," said Mahdi Asfar, an elderly religious scholar at the sit-in. "The Islamists will not be able to stand back, because we are not going back to jail."

Determination waning

Many of these protesters have been on the streets since Friday, when a coalition of pro-Morsi political groups organised a rally under the banner "legitimacy is a red line." The mood on Friday was defiant, with large crowds convinced that Morsi could survive nationwide anti-government protests that were scheduled for Sunday.

As the week wore on, and the scope of the protests became clear, the mood grew increasingly tense. Security checks increased; protesters warned of impending raids by "thugs."

Even on Wednesday, just hours before the army’s deadline for Morsi to resolve the political crisis, there was still a sense of determination in the camp.

Leading members of the Brotherhood and their allies held a fiery press conference in which they demanded that the military back down. "We are the constitution, we are freedom, we are legitimacy, we are the revolution," said Essam el-Erian, the vice chairman of the Brotherhood’s political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party.

Determination had morphed into exhaustion by early Thursday morning.

Those who were still awake seemed taken aback by the day’s events, and blamed the overthrow on members of former President Hosni Mubarak’s regime.

"The problems that people could see, like the fuel crisis, stopped a day or two ago. The stock market rose on the 30th of June by 5 percent. How is everything solved moments before he leaves? I believe it is due to Mubarak and the deep state," said Sharif Ahmed, a businessman.

One speaker railed against a group of prominent political figures, dubbing them thugs. Most of his targets were predictable - Hamdeen Sabbahi, for example, an opposition leader who recently has tried to align himself with the army.

He also singled out Ahmed el-Tayeb, the grand mufti of Al-Azhar University, the highest seat of Sunni learning in Egypt. Tayeb threw his support behind the coup, sitting in the audience while Defence

Minister Abdel Fattah el-Sisi announced Morsi’s ouster and then adding brief remarks of his own.

With most of the media’s attention on the jubilant scenes in Tahrir Square and the presidential palace, many people at the sit-in said they felt ignored.

Journalists arrested

Their isolation was compounded by the shutdown of the Brotherhood’s television channel, Misr 25, and several other religious channels; Brotherhood officials said journalists working for their channel were arrested. “They don’t want people to see what is happening here,” Ahmed said.

Morsi himself is under house arrest, according to top Brotherhood officials, and has no access to the media; he resorted to YouTube to release a brief message after his ouster was announced.

More than a dozen other members of the movement have been arrested as well, according to security officials, a speedy move that to many here highlighted the government’s longstanding hostility towards the Brotherhood and other Islamist movements.

“Morsi’s people have been arrested already. The top people of Mubarak, they’re still out there, more than a year later,” said Ismail Abdel Aziz, a doctor. “The security forces have been sleeping for all this time. And now suddenly they wake up?”

aljazeera.com/english


The Algerian junta refused the democratic electoral victory of an Islamist party before it could take office. Fatah refused Hamas electoral victory in Palestine and had to be run out of Gaza. Having won the majority of the vote in Egyptian elections only to be ripped from power is final proof that the democratic establishment of an Islamic state is forbidden by secularists and impossible. The peaceable wing of world Islamism has been shamed by the protests against Erdogan, and now the brazen ouster of a popularly elected Islamist President in Cairo.
The Zawahiri line, that a Shariah state won't be had but by killing the secularists that would snuff it out, is now PROVEN. This will send throngs of peaceful ballot Islamists down the road of armed insurrection. There is no longer any argument for peaceful transition to be had in Islamist circles. This will send, like a blast of hot gas into a balloon, the Jihadist camp soaring.

Stubby

Don't the MB and Salafist parties still control parliament?

Angocachi


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Have a look at Egypt. 74% of Egyptian Muslims say Shariah should be official law, according to Pew.

After two Islamist parties won Egypt's presidential and parliamentary elections and polls show widespread support for Shariah in Egypt, the military dissolves parliament and ousts the president claiming 'most Egyptians don't want a religious state'.


Army plays up Morsi and Ikhwani connections to Jihadists, in Syria and in Egypt's past.

Army concern about the way President Mohamed Morsi was governing Egypt reached tipping point when the head of state attended a rally packed with hardline fellow Islamists calling for holy war in Syria, military sources have said.
At the June 15th rally, Sunni Muslim clerics used the word “infidels” to denounce both the Shias fighting to protect Syrian president Bashar al-Assad and the non-Islamists that oppose Mr Morsi at home.
Mr Morsi himself called for foreign intervention in Syria against Mr Assad, leading to a veiled rebuke from the army, which issued an apparently bland but sharp-edged statement the next day stressing that its only role was guarding Egypt’s borders.
“The armed forces were very alarmed by the Syrian conference at a time the state was going through a major political crisis,” said one officer, whose comments reflected remarks made privately by other army staff. He was speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not permitted to talk to the media.
Crippling flaw
The controversy surrounding the Syria conference pointed to a crippling flaw in the Morsi presidency: though the constitution names Mr Morsi as supreme commander of the armed forces, the military remains master of its own destiny and a rival source of authority to the country’s first freely elected head of state.
The army’s dramatic ultimatum demanding Mr Morsi and other politicians settle their differences by tomorrow afternoon caught the presidency completely off guard. Triggered by mass protests against Mr Morsi’s rule, it amounted to a soft coup by a military that has been a major recipient of US aid since the 1970s, when Egypt made peace with neighbouring Israel.
The army has cited the need to avoid bloodshed as its main motivation. It is also worried by other major problems facing Egypt, including an economic crisis that has wiped out more than a tenth of the value of the currency this year, making it harder for the state to import fuel and food.
Speaking on the eve of the protests, the president had dismissed the idea that the army would take control again.
If Mr Morsi was aware of irritation in the army, he chose to ignore it, believing his mandate as Egypt’s democratically elected leader gave him licence to make policy the way elected leaders do elsewhere in the world.
For the army, the Syria rally had crossed “a national security red line” by encouraging Egyptians to fight abroad, risking creating a new generation of jihadists, said Yasser El-Shimy, analyst with the International Crisis Group.
At the heart of the military’s concern is the history of militant Islam in Egypt, homeland of al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahri. The military source condemned recent remarks made by “retired terrorists” allied to Mr Morsi, who has deepened his ties with the once-armed group al-Gamaa al-Islamiya.
Speaking privately, officers in the secular-leaning military have said Egyptians did not want a religious state. Though the Brotherhood never said it wanted to set up a theocracy, such concerns reflect the army’s long-standing suspicion towards a movement banned by army rulers in 1954.
In public, Mr Morsi and the army have kept up appearances. The presidency has moved repeatedly to quash rumours of tensions with the generals.
Economic empire
And the constitution signed into law by Mr Morsi late last year protects the interests of the military, which oversees a sprawling economic empire that produces everything from bottled water to tablet computers.
“The presidency didn’t perceive the military as a threat,” added Shimy of the International Crisis Group.
The current head of the armed forces, General Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, was appointed by Mr Morsi in his second month in office after he sent into retirement Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi, Mr Mubarak’s defence minister for two decades.
Twenty years Tantawi’s junior, Gen al-Sisi was promoted from the position of military intelligence director. Analysts have described it as an arrangement that suited both Mr Morsi and a younger generation of army commanders seeking promotion.
He was trained in the United States and Britain, like many officers in an army that receives $1.3 billion (€1 billion) in military aid a year from Washington.
While saying the army was out of politics, Gan al-Sisi has repeatedly called on Egypt’s feuding politicians to settle their differences. In December, he chaired unity talks to ease tensions ignited by a decree that expanded Mr Morsi’s powers.
Earlier this year, Gen al-Sisi warned that unrest could bring down the state. He also responded to calls for the army to unseat Mr Morsi, saying: “No one is going to remove anybody.”
The army has not said what Mr Morsi’s fate will be under the plan it has said it will implement if the politicians fail to agree.
Gen al-Sisi is something of an Islamist himself, said Robert Springborg, an expert on the Egyptian military based at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California. He was citing materials written by Gen al-Sisi during his training in the US. “As I see it they are trying to assert as much pressure as possible to bring about a compromise settlement,” he said.
The military’s actions this week should be viewed as those of an institution, not individuals, added Nathan Brown, an expert on Egypt at George Washington University.
“The personal inclinations of individual members of the armed forces are not the issue and are not on display here.
“There is one thing we do know about the ideology of the military,” he said: “That it sees itself as having a mission to the state rather than the constitution.”
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/worl...tipping-point-for-egypt-army-1.1450612?page=2

The UAE & Saud celebrate Ikhwan's ouster.
The United Arab Emirates, one of the Arab world's most outspoken critics of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood, is expressing support for the Egyptian military for ousting the Islamist-led government of Mohammed Morsi.
A statement Thursday by the official news agency WAM noted "satisfaction" in the removal of Egypt's president after days of massive street protests in Cairo and elsewhere.
In neighboring Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah sent a congratulations message to the head of the Egypt's Constitutional Court. The UAE claims Islamist groups backed by the Muslim Brotherhood have sought to topple its Western-backed ruling system. Earlier this week, 69 people were convicted on coup plotting charges. Another 30 suspects, including Egyptians, await trial for alleged links to Brotherhood networks.
Among wealthy Gulf Arab states, only Qatar has close Brotherhood ties.(which is why the Egyptian military shut down Al Jazeera yesterday).
http://abcnews.go.com/International...fall-egyptian-islamists-19576376#.UdUsjfmUR2E

Syria's Assad is also pleased with Morsi's ouster.
"What is happening in Egypt is the fall of so-called political Islam," Assad said. "This is the fate of anyone in the world who tries to use religion for political or factional interests."
"The ruling experience of the Muslim Brotherhood failed before it even started because it goes against the nature of people," Assad said in the interview, charging that the Brotherhood aimed to spread strife in the Arab world.
Assad's father, the late President Hafez Assad, cracked down on a Muslim Brotherhood-led rebellion in the northern city of Hama in 1982. The Syrian forces, led by the president's brother and special forces from their minority Alawite sect, razed much of the city in a three-week air and ground attack, killing between 10,000 and 20,000 people.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/03/assad-morsi-political-islam_n_3542737.html
Apparently Hezbollah (Party of Allah - in English) and the Islamist Republic of Iran (founded on an 'Islamic Revolution' and run by Ayatollahs) are set to fall.
niccolo and donkey Roland Bronze Age Pervert CLAMOR Stubby Thomas777 O'Zebedee Byssus
Angocachi
Broseph

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