industryterm:explosive devices

  • Ce que l’on sait de l’attaque terroriste contre deux mosquées en Nouvelle-Zélande
    https://www.lemonde.fr/international/article/2019/03/15/nouvelle-zelande-fusillade-dans-une-mosquee-de-christchurch_5436217_3210.htm

    Au moins 49 personnes ont été tuées et une vingtaine blessées à Christchurch, dans un acte terroriste pour lequel un homme, présenté comme un « extrémiste de droite » qui a filmé son attaque, a été arrêté.

    Au moins quarante-neuf personnes ont été tuées et vingt autres, dont des femmes et des enfants, blessées, vendredi 15 mars, lors d’une attaque terroriste contre deux mosquées de la ville néo-zélandaise de Christchurch, selon un bilan officiel. « Il est clair qu’on ne peut décrire cela que comme une attaque terroriste, a déclaré la première ministre, Jacinda Ardern. Pour ce que nous en savons, [l’attaque] semble avoir été bien planifiée. »
    […]
    L’attaque, méthodique, contre les deux mosquées a eu lieu à l’heure de la prière du vendredi. Au moment de la fusillade, la mosquée Al-Noor, sur Deans Avenue, dans le centre de la ville, était remplie de fidèles. Quarante et une personnes y ont été tuées, tandis que sept autres ont succombé dans une deuxième attaque perpétrée à la mosquée de Linwood, à cinq kilomètres de là, dans la banlieue de Christchurch. Un blessé est ensuite mort à l’hôpital.

    • C’était un garçon si poli, si bien élevé,…

      Christchurch mosque shootings: Gunman livestreamed 17 minutes of shooting terror - NZ Herald
      https://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=12213076

      A horrific shooting at a Christchurch mosque was livestreamed for 17 minutes by the gunman.

      Australian police have identified the shooter as Brenton Tarrant - a white, 28-year-old Australian-born man. Twitter has shut down a user account in that name.

      The gunman published an online link to a lengthy “manifesto”, which the Herald has chosen not to report.

      Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison confirmed an individual taken into custody was an Australian-born citizen. He called him “an extremist, right-wing, violent terrorist”.

      Sky News reported that the man’s home town of Grafton was in shock, trying to come to terms with how a “polite, well-mannered young man” came to find himself on a path that led to Christchurch.

      He was a student at the local high school and went on to work at a gym, where his former boss said he regularly volunteered his time to train kids for free.

    • FP-Morning Brief: 49 killed and 48 injured in New Zealand mosque shootings

      Four people were arrested in connection to the attacks. One of the alleged attackers—Brenton Tarrant, a 28-year-old Australian national—live streamed the shooting, creating a harrowing, 17-minute video and issued a manifesto explaining his actions that draws heavily on the ideas of white nationalists and fascists, including the Norwegian mass murderer Anders Behring Breivik and the Nazi-era British Union of Fascists leader Oswald Mosley.

      Authorities found and disarmed two explosive devices attached to suspects’ cars.

  • Burkina Faso: June – October 2018 Chronology of Violent Incidents Related to Al-Qaeda and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS)
    Sahel Memo
    http://www.sahelmemo.com/2018/11/01/burkina-faso-june-october-2018-chronology-of-violent-incidents-related-to

    Burkina Faso: June – October 2018 Takeaways and Trends
    – Militants activity in Burkina Faso have been on the rise for the past two years. Since June 2018 Sahel MeMo observed similar trend with an expansion from Northern parts bordering Mali and Niger, to the Est Region on the borders with Benin, Niger, and Togo. Militant groups have been trying to establish a base there since early 2016, explaining groups’ ability to carry complex deadly attacks, including the use of improvised explosive devices (IEDs).
    – Violence in the eastern part of Burkina Faso by militant groups most likely to continue. In addition to targeting security forces and intimidation acts against civil servants, militants will look to continue to disrupt gold mining in the area. In fact, security forces in charge of protecting gold mines or escorting staff have been subject to attacks by militants at least in August 2018. If this to continue, livelihoods of local communities benefiting from gold mining could be at risk if security situation continues to deteriorate in the region.
    – These attacks are mostly attributed rather than claimed by militant groups known to operate in Burkina Faso. These militant groups include Ansaroul Islam, Jama’at Nusrat al-Islam wal-Muslimeen (JNIM), and Islamic State in the Greater Sahara (ISGS). Out of the three only JNIM have been consistent releasing official claims of attacks. Thus analysts, observers, journalists, and Burkinabe authorities are contributing most of violent incidents based on the area where occurred and means used. Important to note that between June and October 2018 no incidents officially claimed by JNIM. This could be explained by difficulty of movement during rainy season (June – October) in the region.
    – October 3rd witnessed the first reported French airstrikes against militants after request of support from Burkinabe authorities. This was following a deadly attack against Inata gold mine gendarmerie post.


    #Burkina #Terrorisme

  • Afghanistan Is Trying to Save Its Child Bombers.
    https://foreignpolicy.com/2018/08/29/afghanistan-is-trying-to-save-its-child-bombers
    https://foreignpolicymag.files.wordpress.com/2018/08/liaf3115.jpg?w=1536&h=1024&crop=0,0,0,0

    In a room full of loud teenagers, 17-year-old Mohammad Ehsan is the quietest. (The names of the boys in this piece have been changed to protect their identities.) The other boys in this juvenile rehabilitation center in the Afghan capital of Kabul are rough and boisterous; he takes the corner-most seat and avoids making eye contact. He speaks only when spoken to, sometimes answering with just a single word. As we talk, he stares at the floor or fidgets with the corner of his white shalwar kameez, as though he would rather be anywhere else than here.

    His silence and his fear were hard-learned. Ehsan is one of 27 teenagers in this facility recruited and trained by the Taliban or the Islamic State to plant improvised explosive devices (IEDs) in the country’s endless war. Some, including Ehsan, were held in the Bagram prison located outside of Kabul, formerly operated by the United States. The other children are afraid of associating with them. “They’re too political and dangerous,” a young man incarcerated for murder said.

  • Civilians in war zones by UN Humanitarian - United Nations OCHA
    https://unocha.exposure.co/civilians-in-war-zones

    A total of 42,972 people were killed or injured by explosive weapons in 2017. Of these people, 31,904 (three out of every four) were civilians. This is a 38 per cent increase in civilian deaths compared to 2016. Moreover, 92 per cent of those reported harmed by explosive weapons in populated areas were civilians. Explosive weapons include aircraft bombs, artillery shells, missile and rocket warheads, mortar bombs and improvised explosive devices.

    #civils #victimes_civiles

  • Comment and Discussion | U.S. Naval Institute
    https://www.usni.org/magazines/proceedings/2018-05/comment-and-discussion

    Au courrier des lecteurs des USNI Proceedings, cette contribution d’un Captain réserviste en retraite, sous le titre Iran owns the Gray Zone.

    (après avoir rappelé l’incident du HSV Swift en octobre 2016…

    I predict that the next attack is one that Commander Gilmore doesn’t elaborate too much about (see his footnotes), and that’s the Iranian Sadegh-1 “drones” flying near our carriers and in their air traffic patterns. According to CNN, twice in August 2017 the USS Nimitz (CVN-68) in the Persian Gulf encountered drones flying “within 1,000 ft.” Since that event, crudely made drones with improvised explosive devices on them were used in an attack on the Russian air base at Khmeimim in Syria. The Russians were able to neutralize them either by electronic or kinetic means, but the precedent is there.

    It’s time for a different type of plane guard around the carrier. In addition to the plane guard, a “drone CAP” helo should be ready to intercept and down any drone flying too close to the carrier, either kinetically or with a Drone- Defender or similar type of device. We should not wait for an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) to collide with an F/A-18 in the pattern or hit an aircraft on the deck. The apparent lack of defense against the UAV is something the Iranians or their proxies will exploit.

  • Israeli forces kill 3 Palestinians in separate incidents along Gaza border
    April 30, 2018 11:23 A.M.
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=780072

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — Three Palestinians were killed on Sunday in two separate incidents on the Israel-Gaza border, according to the Israeli army.

    The statement said that the first incident occurred when two Palestinian men “attempted to infiltrate” Israel from a southern section of the Gaza border fence. Israeli solders shot and killed one of the men, while the other sustained non-fatal wounds, and was later taken to an unknown location for questioning.

    The second incident transpired when, according to the Israeli statement, two men managed to cross the fence and “hurled explosive devices” at soldiers, who shot them dead.

    The identities of the men who were killed remained unknown.

    According to statistics released by the Gaza Ministry of Health, the number of Palestinians killed by the Israeli army now stands at 47, as the “Great March of Return” demonstrations draw closer to their sixth week.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Three Palestinians Who Were Killed By The Army, Sunday, Identified
      May 1, 2018 1:20 AM

      The al-Mezan Center for Human Rights has reported that the three Palestinians, who were killed by Israeli army fire, Sunday, has been identified, and added that the soldiers also abducted three other Palestinians a day earlier.

      The slain Palestinians have been identified as Atiya Mohammad al-‘Ammawi, 20, Yousef Ahmad al-‘Ammawi, 18, from Khan Younis, and Yousef Jasser Abu Jazar, 16, from Rafah, in the southern part of the Gaza Strip.

      The Israeli army is holding their corpses and is refusing to transfer them back to the Palestinian side.

      In addition, three Palestinians, identified as Ahmad Sami al-Ammawi, 26, Salim Younis Abu Thaher, 21, and Ibrahim Nabil Abu ‘Eid, were taken prisoner by the soldiers, on Saturday, after they reportedly crossed the border fence.

      In related news, the soldiers shot on Monday evening, a young Palestinian man with live fire in Khuza’a town, east of Khan Younis, and another young man east of the al-Boreij refugee camp in central Gaza, and two others east of Gaza City.

      #Palestine_assassinée

  • Afghanistan: 10,000 civilian casualties in 2017 - UN report suicide attacks and IEDS caused high number of deaths and injuries | UNAMA
    https://unama.unmissions.org/afghanistan-10000-civilian-casualties-2017-un-report-suicide-attac

    KABUL - More than 10,000 civilians lost their lives or suffered injuries during 2017, according to the latest annual UN report documenting the impact of the armed conflict on civilians in Afghanistan.

    A total of 10,453 civilian casualties - 3,438 people killed and 7,015 injured - were documented in the 2017 Annual Report released today by the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) and the UN Human Rights Office. Although this figure represents a decrease of nine per cent compared with 2016, the report highlights the high number of casualties caused by suicide bombings and other attacks using improvised explosive devices (IEDs).

    “The chilling statistics in this report provide credible data about the war’s impact, but the figures alone cannot capture the appalling human suffering inflicted on ordinary people, especially women and children,” said Tadamichi Yamamoto, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Afghanistan.

    Yamamoto, who also heads UNAMA, expressed deep concern at the increased harm to civilians caused by suicide attacks. “I am particularly appalled by the continued indiscriminate and unlawful use of IEDs such as suicide bombs and pressure-plate devices in civilian populated areas. This is shameful,” he said.

    The second leading cause of civilian casualties in 2017 was ground engagements between anti-government elements and pro-government forces, although there was a decrease of 19 per cent from the record levels seen in 2016.

    The report attributes close to two-thirds of all casualties (65 per cent) to anti-government elements: 42 per cent to the Taliban, 10 per cent to Daesh / Islamic State Khorasan Province (ISIL-KP), and 13 per cent to undetermined and other anti-government elements.

    Pro-Government Forces caused a fifth of civilian casualties: 16 per cent were attributed to the Afghan national security forces, two per cent to international military forces, one per cent each to pro-Government armed groups and undetermined pro-Government forces. Unattributed cross-fire during ground engagements between anti-government elements and pro-government forces caused 11 per cent of civilian casualties.

    Women and children remained heavily affected by conflict-related violence. UNAMA documented that, in 2017, 359 women were killed - a rise of five per cent - and 865 injured. Child casualties - 861 killed and 2,318 injured - decreased by 10 per cent compared with 2016.

  • Palestinian youth killed during Israeli raid in al-Duheisha refugee camp
    July 14, 2017 9:26 A.M. (Updated: July 14, 2017 11:55 A.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=778073

    BETHLEHEM (Ma’an) — An 18-year-old Palestinian was killed by Israeli forces during a detention raid in the al-Duheisha refugee camp in the southern occupied West Bank district of Bethlehem on Friday morning.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent told Ma’an that the teenager succumbed in the hospital to wounds sustained in his upper body, after Israeli forces raided the refugee camp seeking to detain two residents.

    The Palestinian Ministry of Health identified the slain youth as Baraa Hamamda.

    Locals told Ma’an that Israeli forces detained Muhammad Ubeid and Muath Abu Nassar during the raid, adding that they then fired live bullets, tear gas, and stun grenades at al-Duheisha residents.

    An Israeli army spokesperson told Ma’an that during a detention raid in al-Duheisha, Palestinians threw “explosive devices and blocks” at Israeli forces, who fired towards the youth.

    They added that the army was “examining... reports of a casualty.”

    Despite stating that the army had raided al-Duheisha to carry out detentions, the spokesperson said they did not have information about the two detentions in the refugee camp, and said that they would look into the reports.

    #Palestine_assassinée

  • Israeli forces shoot, kill 2 young Palestinians during raid in Jenin refugee camp
    July 12, 2017 10:17 A.M. (Updated: July 12, 2017 10:32 A.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?ID=778042

    JENIN (Ma’an) — Israeli forces shot and killed two young Palestinians — one 17-year-old and one 20-year-old — and injured at least two others after a violent military raid into Jenin refugee camp in the northern occupied West Bank erupted into clashes early Wednesday morning.

    An Israeli army spokesperson said that during an “operation” in the camp, a Palestinian gunman opened fire at Israeli forces, and other locals threw Molotov cocktails, which prompted Israeli fires to open fire toward the "attackers.”

    No casualties were reported among the heavily armed and armored Israeli forces.

    According to the Israeli army, no one was detained during the raid.

    The spokesperson did not acknowledge the deaths of the two Palestinians, and said reports of casualties were under investigation.

    Medical sources at Khalil Suliman governmental hospital said that 17-year-old Aws Muhammad Youssif Salamah died later in the hospital after succumbing to a gunshot wound.

    The Palestinian Red Crescent told Ma’an that 20-year-old Saad Nasser Hassan Abd al-Fattah Salah was shot and killed by Israeli forces at the scene of the clashes. He reportedly sustained bullets to his head and chest.

    Local sources highlighted Salah was survived by three brothers — one of whom, Youssif, is currently imprisoned in an Israeli jails — and that their father was permanently disabled after being shot by Israeli forces some time in the past.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Deux Palestiniens tués par l’armée israélienne (sources palestiniennes)
      AFP / 12 juillet 2017 07h20
      https://www.romandie.com/news/Deux-Palestiniens-tues-par-l-armee-israelienne-sources-palestiniennes/814147.rom

      Jénine (Territoires palestiniens) - Deux Palestiniens ont été tués mercredi par des balles tirées par l’armée israélienne lors d’affrontements dans le camp de réfugiés de Jénine dans le nord de la Cisjordanie occupée, selon des sources palestiniennes.

      Un Palestinien a été tué sur le coup et un autre grièvement blessé a succombé. Un troisième a été touché à la jambe, ont précisé ces sources médicales et de sécurité sans fournir dans l’immédiat des précisions sur ces affrontements.

      L’armée israélienne a déclaré que des soldats avaient ouvert le feu sur des « assaillants palestiniens armés qui ont tiré et lancé des engins explosifs » sur les soldats opérant dans le camp. Aucun soldat n’a été blessé, a-t-elle ajouté.

    • Weekly Report On Israeli Human Rights Violations in the Occupied Palestinian Territory (06– 12 July 2017)
      http://pchrgaza.org/en/?p=9250

      Wednesday, 12 July 2017

      In new crime of excessive use of force, Israeli forces killed two Palestinian civilians and wounded a third one in Jenin refugee camp in the northern West Bank. The Israeli forces claimed that the soldiers opened fire at “two attackers” after “Palestinian armed persons opened fire at them and threw explosive devices at the forces stationed in the camp”. However, PCHR’s investigations and eyewitnesses refute the Israeli narrative. PCHR strongly condemns this new crime. PCHR hereby stresses this crime was committed after the Israeli political and military leaders gave the Israeli soldiers the green light to shed the Palestinian blood in light of the international community’s policy to tolerate Israel for crimes committed by the Israeli soldiers against Palestinian civilians. According to PCHR’s investigations and eyewitnesses’ testimonies, at approximately 02:00 on Wednesday, 12 July 2017, Israeli forces backed by military vehicles and dozens of infantry soldiers moved into Jenin refugee camp in the northern West Bank. They stationed in the center of the camp and then stepped out of their vehicles. They surrounded several houses to raid them and arrest some of its residents. Meanwhile, dozens of Palestinian young men and children gathered and threw stones at the soldiers, who heavily opened fire at the stone-throwers. As a result, ‘Oday Nizar Abu Na’asah (19) sustained a live bullet wound to the leg. At approximately 04:00, the Israeli forces withdrew while 2 military jeeps stationed at the western entrance to the camp. In the meantime, a motorbike driven to the western side of the camp was traveled by Sa’ed Naser ‘Abdel Fattah Salah (20) from the eastern neighborhood in Jenin, and Aws Mohammed Yousif Salamah (17), from Jenin refugee camp. When the jeeps moved the motorbike moved behind them, so the Israeli soldiers opened fire at them from a distance of 4 meters. As a result, Sa’ed was wounded and fell on the ground and Aws was also wounded and walked for 50 meters away from the motorbike before he fell on the ground. The wounded civilians were transferred to Martyr Dr. Khalil Soliman Governmental Hospital in Jenin. Medical sources said that Sa’ed arrived dead at the hospital and doctors there tried for hours to save Aws’s life, but he died succumbing to his serious wounds. Medical sources mentioned that Sa’ed was hit with two bullets to the head and left side of the chest while Aws was hit with a bullet that entered his abdomen and exited the chest. An eyewitness said that he saw 3 Israeli soldiers surrounding Sa’ed and trying to move him. Then a sound of gunshot was heard from the place.

  • ’State of Jenin’: A Palestinian refugee camp raided by Israeli troops night after night - Israel News -
    Haaretz.com | Gideon Levy and Alex Levac Feb 10, 2017 12:42 PM
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.770743
    http://www.haaretz.com/polopoly_fs/1.770967.1486712382!/image/446912015.JPG_gen/derivatives/headline_1200x630/446912015.JPG

    After a soldier was wounded in Jenin, the IDF intensified its nighttime raids there. 
And when the Israelis don’t enter this West Bank refugee camp, the Palestinian security forces do.

    This is a type of anxiety that no Israeli civilian is familiar with: nights when sleep is marred by the noise of soldiers moving about, gunshots, armored vehicles outside the window, stun grenades and explosives in an adjacent alley. Night after night. Soldiers who storm the house rowdily, after blowing up the front door. Children who wake up in a fright to the sight of masked, heavily armed figures during dead-of-night kidnappings euphemistically called “arrests.”

    On one occasion during the second intifada, I slept over in the Jenin refugee camp. I’ll never forget the fear that seized me when soldiers raided it. It’s a particularly chilling experience in a densely crowded, yet determined and militant camp like that in Jenin. Last week, raids were carried out there almost every night. After a soldier sustained light to moderate wounds during one, the Israel Defense Forces ratcheted up even more the rate and intensity of its infiltration.

    Residents are convinced that on the night between Jan. 28 and 29, soldiers had come to avenge the wounding of their buddy and teach the camp a lesson it wouldn’t forget. “They came to kill,” people in the battered camp said this week, as they buried another of its sons, Mohammed Abu Khalifa, after he was killed by soldiers’ bullets on Sunday. He was buried in the cemetery of intifada victims at the edge of the camp, which, like Jenin itself, suffers from severe overcrowding.

    The young adults in the camp spend their days sleeping and their nights in wakefulness. They have no reason to get up during the day. They hang out in the meager café on the main street; some of them man observation posts at the camp’s entrances and instantly report every suspicious movement on Facebook. They also post real-time videos when the IDF enters. Facebook is the most widely used means of communication when it comes to warning about everything, including the arrival of Israeli troops. Of the Facebook groups in the camp, the best known is “State of Jenin Camp.”

    The soldiers usually show up at about 2 A.M. in armored vehicles, some of which look like civilian cars. They descend on foot from the hilltop where the houses are, and information about their whereabouts spreads like wildfire. By the time they reach the alleys below, half the camp is awake and young people are waiting for them with stones, pipe bombs and makeshift weapons. In contrast to the second intifada, when we met armed people at almost every street corner, there is hardly any standard-issue weaponry in evidence these days. The army uses tear gas, stun grenades and, of course, live ammunition.

    It’s not only the IDF that executes nocturnal raids. Similar operations are carried out by the forces of the Palestinian Authority, in coordination with the army. When the Israelis arrive, the PA personnel leave. The young people oppose them, too, but less intensely, and the mutual firing of weapons is mainly into the air. No one has been killed in the Palestinian forces’ raids of the past few months.

    In recent weeks, PA troops – who at one time were afraid to enter the camp – arrested 15 to 20 young people, taking them to Jericho for interrogation. The IDF arrested only four people in that period. No one from either group has been released yet.

    The same pattern played itself out last week: Almost every night, Israeli or Palestinian forces were in the camp. Never a dull moment. Last Thursday, an Israeli soldier was wounded. On the two nights that followed, the IDF entered in large numbers. On Saturday night, they didn’t arrest anyone – residents of the camp are convinced that they came not to detain people but to kill: They killed one young person and wounded four others.

    After a year in which no one was killed in the camp, they’re in mourning again here.

    Twenty-year-old Mathin Dabiyeh was in the café at the foot of the hill on that night. Now he hobbles about on crutches at the entrance to his house. At 3:15 A.M., after it was known that soldiers had entered the camp, he began to make his way home. The soldiers appeared opposite him in an alley, he recalls now. There’s no point asking him if he was carrying a pipe bomb or an improvised firearm, as I won’t get a straight answer. The soldiers shot him in the leg and he started to run up the alley, limping. The troops gave chase but he managed to elude them. A neighbor with a moped took him to the hospital just outside the camp’s entrance. The hospital’s ambulances don’t dare enter the camp when the IDF is present, so in most cases the wounded are taken out by local residents.

    The bullet lodged in Dabiyeh’s knee. His friend Aslam, who was wounded together with him, is still hospitalized; he was hit in the stomach. What will Dabiyeh do the next time soldiers enter? “I can’t run now,” he tells us, evasively. He wears a black knitted skullcap. His brother works as a security guard at the Jenin branch of Kentucky Fried Chicken.

    It all took place in the early hours of Sunday morning in the area between the buildings, next to the Queens’ Salon beauty parlor, which is now closed. According to eyewitnesses, IDF snipers positioned themselves on the roof of a house across from the beauty parlor, hiding behind a black plastic water container. The crying of an infant can now be heard from that house, which, like others nearby, is plastered with militant graffiti. The wounded men escaped through an alley at the end of which is an old poster with a photograph of Saddam Hussein. The home of Mohammed Abu Khalifa, who was killed in the incident, is located next to a mosque named for Abdullah Azzam, from the neighboring village of Silat al-Harithiya, who is said to have been a friend of Osama bin Laden.

    Narrow steps lead to a small, stark house, which is almost bursting with people. The last day of Mohammed’s life was his 19th birthday. In the evening he celebrated here with friends. There was a power outage, an almost-daily occurrence, so his friends played music from their cellphones. They drank juice. This is what a birthday party here looks like.

    The dead boy’s uncle, Jumaa Abu Jebal, who lost a leg in the IDF’s invasion of the camp in 2002, and his mother, Fatma, greeted us on our visit this past Monday. Mohammed dropped out of school in the 11th grade and began working with his father at his garage. After his friends left that night, we are told, he went to fix a car that had broken down in the camp. That was at about 10 P.M.

    An hour later or so, he returned home and went to sleep, his mother relates. At 2 A.M., friends knocked on the door. They came to summon him, after learning that soldiers were in the camp. Mohammed’s father forbade him to go out, but around 3, after his father went back to sleep, the teen snuck out of the house. That act cost him his life.

    His mother heard shots at about 3:30 – the shots that killed her son, a few dozen meters from his home. She learned from a Facebook post that Mohammed had been wounded – that’s how parents find out about their children’s fate here. She tried to get to the hospital, but was forced back home by the shooting. It wasn’t until 5:45 A.M., after the last of the troops had left the camp, that she could leave. Mohammed died before she and her husband reached the hospital; he had been struck by three bullets in the chest and one in the stomach.

    A week earlier, Israeli troops had entered this house in search of Mohammed’s uncle, Jumaa, who lives on the upper floor. A Shin Bet security service agent ordered the amputee to get dressed, but he wasn’t arrested. Jumaa is a Hamas activist.

    “This is the last time I’m coming here. The next time I’ll send a drone to liquidate you,” the Shin Bet man told Jumaa, who replied, “If you have anything [on me], take me.” To which “Captain Haroun,” as the agent styles himself, retorted, “You know what people around you are doing.”

    Jumaa, an affable, smiling man who’s married to an Israeli Arab woman from Haifa and speaks broken Hebrew from his years in an Israeli prison, is certain the Shin Bet man was referring to his nephew Mohammed.

    The IDF Spokesperson’s Unit stated this week, in response to a query from Haaretz: “On Jan. 29, explosive devices were thrown at IDF soldiers during activity in the Jenin refugee camp. The force responded with gunfire at those who were throwing the devices, as a result of which one of them was killed. The IDF enters the refugee camp in accordance with operational needs and with the aim of preventing terrorist activity in the area.”

    Not far from the house of mourning, on a wall in another home, is a photograph of Majd Lahlouh, who was shot to death after going out to confront soldiers in the camp in August 2013, at the age of 22. Beneath the photo lies his cousin of 23, Izak Lahlouh. He, too, was wounded that night last month, by a bullet that hit an artery his leg. He was told in the hospital that if his evacuation had been delayed by another few minutes, he would have died from loss of blood. Now he’s bedridden, keeping warm with blankets and watching television, with crutches by his side.

  • Before firing at a Palestinian, the Israeli sniper asked: Where do you want to be shot?
    http://www.haaretz.com/israel-news/.premium-1.742301
    Four rounds of sniper fire hit Mohammed Amassi, a young Palestinian baker standing on the roof of his home in the Al-Fawwar refugee camp. As he tries now to recover from his wounds, he still remembers the mocking words of the soldier who shot him.

    By Gideon Levy and Alex Levac | Sep. 16, 2016 | 4:00 PM | 2

    Why waste words when the video from the Palestinian news agency Ma’an shows pretty much everything? Israeli soldiers are on the roof of the next-door apartment building: One is on the lower roof, two on the balcony of the apartment above the roof, and two more are looking out from the apartment window. A few teenage girls and children are looking at them from the neighboring roof. Total silence. Suddenly, the two soldiers on the balcony raise their hands, as though giving a signal, and one of them, the sniper, aims and starts shooting. On the roof of the building, Mohammed Amassi is hit. He falls to the ground and starts crawling for his life, bent on getting off the roof. Finally, a medical team gets him down via a ladder. The only thing Amassi is holding is his cell phone. Nothing about him could have seemed threatening to the soldiers on the roof opposite, about 80 meters (260 feet) away. The sniper took aim and fired, hitting him with round after round. The palm of one hand is covered with blood; he is writhing in pain, stunned.

    A few weeks later, Amassi, 22, is in his living room, lying on a new adjustable bed that has been loaned to him by a Palestinian charity. He’s a good-looking young man, smiling and quiet. His family’s home is well kept, compared to others in Al-Fawwar — a hardscrabble refugee camp, the most southerly in the West Bank and the one that most closely resembles the refugee camps of the Gaza Strip, which isn’t all that far from here.

    On August 16, a huge Israel Defense Forces raiding party, consisting of hundreds of soldiers, swooped into Al-Fawwar in the dead of night. In less than 24 hours, they killed one person and wounded dozens more. Their haul: two old pistols. (Amira Hass wrote about this unbelievable operation, “One killed and dozens wounded at a Palestinian refugee camp, all for two pistols,” in Haaretz, August 21.) The local residents are convinced the raid was nothing more than a training exercise carried out at their expense.

    We arrived at Al-Fawwar on the eve of Id al-Adha (the feast of the sacrifice). In the butcher shop, a cow was being sliced up for the holiday. Those who can afford meat congregated around the animal, waiting for their portion. The IDF rarely carries out raids in this crowded camp, where about 10,000 people live in an area of one square kilometer. The troops haven’t returned since the raid.

    Amassi is the son of the camp’s baker, Ibrahim Amassi, and the eldest of six siblings. Their family bakery was the first in Al-Fawwar, dating from the foundation of the refugee camp in the early 1950s. In recent years, it’s produced mainly pretzels, cookies and special doughs for traditional dishes. Mohammed studied interior design, but afterward became a baker to help provide for the family. He works two shifts a day, morning and afternoon, seven days a week. He has never been arrested or even been interrogated by Israeli authorities. Above the living room in which he is now recovering, another apartment is being built: he will live there when he marries and has a family of his own.

    His hand is bandaged, and both legs are marked with wounds and scars from the shooting and subsequent surgery. Bedridden, Amassi continues to suffer from intense pain. It’s not clear whether he will be able either to walk again or to use his hand. At the moment, he can only hobble around with the aid of crutches. On the day of the big raid last month, his younger siblings woke him at 6:30 A.M., three hours after the soldiers entered the camp. The troops were scouring the alleys and seizing control of buildings. At first, the camp’s inhabitants thought the soldiers had come to demolish the home of Mohammed al-Shobaki, who stabbed an IDF soldier last November and was killed afterward. However, it soon became apparent that the troops had other intentions, though it was not clear what they were.

    Watching the show

    The whole camp was up on rooftops, watching the show, and Amassi was no exception. His house has two roofs: one, with a low rail, where people sit on hot summer nights; and above it an unfenced roof, for the water tank and satellite dish. Amassi climbed onto the upper roof to get a better view. It’s dangerous there: Without the fence, there’s no place to take cover. Teams from Ma’an and the television channel Palestine Today were positioned on the roof of the adjacent building, which offers better protection from the soldiers. Clashes were taking place between soldiers and stone throwers on the camp’s main street, but quiet prevailed here, on the high hill where this neighborhood stands.

    The troops seized quite a few houses — about 30, according to Musa Abu Hashhash, a field researcher for the Israeli human rights organization B’Tselem — and carried out searches in about 200 homes, smashing holes in some walls for snipers. At about 9 A.M., Amassi was talking to the reporters on the next-door roof. Suddenly he heard a soldier who was deployed on the balcony of the building below his call to him in Arabic: “Where do you want to get it?” Amassi was petrified. He knew what this meant: In which part of your body do you want to be shot?

    According to Amassi, there was nothing to account for the soldier’s chilling question. The street was quiet, and Mohammed had done nothing that could be construed as a threat to the troops, who were 80 meters away as the crow flies. His father, Ibrahim, believes the soldiers shot his son in order to demonstrate their power to the camera crews on the roof next door.

    “What did the soldier say to you?” Amassi’s friend, Ismail Najar, asked from the neighboring roof. But before Amassi could answer, he saw the soldier take aim and start shooting at him. Three bullets struck him in rapid succession. The first slammed into his left leg next to the knee, the second hit him between his hip and his left thigh, the third smashed into his right leg. When he raised his hands and called out to the soldier, “Enough, enough,” the sniper fired one more round, perhaps as an encore. The final bullet hit him in the palm of his hand. They were 0.22-inch Ruger, or Toto, bullets and didn’t kill him

    Amassi then tried to find shelter on an exposed roof that has no shelter. He could have fallen off. In the edited Ma’an video, he’s seen crawling desperately. A flimsy, makeshift iron ladder — which I was afraid to climb — is the only way to gain access the upper roof. Somehow, the paramedics got him down. They carried him by foot for about 150 meters up the narrow alley to their ambulance, which took a soldier-bypass route to get him to Al-Ahli Hospital in nearby Hebron. Amassi was semiconscious. Damage had been done to blood vessels. To avoid having to amputate his leg, he was moved to Hebron’s other hospital, Alia. But they, too, did not have the necessary specialist. That evening, he was transferred to the Ramallah Government Hospital, where he underwent surgery.

    In reply to a query from Haaretz, the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit stated this week: “On August 16, a military operation was conducted in Al-Fawwar refugee camp, with the aim of thwarting and striking at the terrorist infrastructures that exist throughout the camp. The operation included extensive searches to seize combat means and also the arrest of five wanted individuals. During the operation, army forces came under live fire and violent disturbances developed, which included the throwing of stones and cinder blocks, and dozens of explosive devices and Molotov cocktails, to which the forces responded with crowd dispersal means and shooting. The video mentioned is edited tendentiously and does not reflect the violent situation that developed in the refugee camp.”

    Amassi spent 10 days in the Ramallah hospital. One bullet remains lodged deep inside, somewhere between his waist and hip and left thigh, and the physicians aren’t sure they will be able to remove it. If not, he will probably have to undergo additional surgery in Jordan. Next to his bed is a plastic jar containing the two bullet fragments that were successfully extracted from his body. He’s taking five different types of painkillers to try to relieve the suffering.

    We leave him and go up to the roof. There are tangled iron rods where he fell. A few hours after he was shot, troops killed Mohammed Abu Hashhash, 19, who was shot the instant he stepped out of his house, a few hundred meters away, on another street. The soldiers opened fire through a breach they made in the wall of a neighboring house. That breach, together with a painting of the dead teenager on the wall, constitute a monument to a young man whose killing was probably as unnecessary as the shooting of the young baker in Al-Fawwar.

    • The comment of Fulvio Vassallo via facebook:

      Omicidio preterintenzionale ed arresto a piede libero. Uno scandalo che nessuno vuole vedere. Se fosse stato un immigrato a colpire gli avrebbero contestato un omicidio premeditato.

    • Nigerian asylum-seeker murdered in Italy

      Security officials have arrested an Italian man suspected of murdering a Nigerian asylum-seeker who fled Boko Haram’s terror in northeastern Nigeria, Italy’s interior minister said Thursday. The killing reflects the growing xenophobia asylum-seekers across Europe face on a daily basis.

      Authorities said the suspect, Amadeo Manicini, verbally attacked Emmanuel Chidi Nnamdi and his wife, Chimiary, while they were out for a walk in Fermo, Italy. Mancini hurled racist insults at Chimiary, and the altercation turned violent when Nnamdi, 36, attempted to defend her. Mancini’s lawyer said he acted in self-defense, but Chimiary said her husband jumped to her defense only after Mancini grabbed her arm. Nnamdi fell into a coma and died Wednesday from injuries he sustained in the scuffle.
      Prosecutors on Thursday said they will charge Mancini with manslaughter aggravated by racist motives. Interior Minister Angelino Alfano denounced the attack and said Chimiary will be granted humanitarian protection in Italy.

      “The great heart of Italy is not represented by the man who committed this homicide,” Alfano told reporters in Fermo. “The germ of racism needs to be cut off before it can plant a poisonous seed.”

      Nnamdi and his wife fled their village in northeastern Nigeria in 2015 after Boko Haram torched their church and killed two of Nnamdi’s relatives and their child, church officials in Fermo said. The couple began the perilous journey to Europe by land. They took a smuggler’s boat from the Libyan coast and arrived in #Fermo, where the Catholic Community of Capodarco received them.

      “Why do you leave me in this wicked world?” Chimiary

      cried to her late husband during a Wednesday vigil.

      Tension has grown in recent months in communities welcoming migrants. Earlier this year, security officials found explosive devices outside four Fermo churches that assist migrants.

      The European Union has a legal framework that should ensure the integration of migrants and combat xenophobic incidents, but the directives are not fully implemented, said Judit Tanczos, a legal policy analyst with the Migration Policy Group in Belgium. Tanczos said her organization has received reports of vandalism against migrant reception centers, as well as verbal attacks and, in some cases, physical violence against migrants. The amount of reported xenophobic attacks increased by 50 percent three days after Britain voted to leave the European Union on June 23, Tanczos added.

      “These xenophobic attacks happen against asylum seekers on a daily basis,” she said. “It shows once there’s exclusionary speech that allows people to say we don’t want you in our country, people will feel open to do these things and feel they can get away with it.”

      Doris Peschke with the Churches’ Commission for Migrants in Europe agreed the rising number of racist attacks across the continent is becoming a worrying trend. Peschke noted cases of people standing outside migrant centers and shouting their opposition to the migrants’ presence. Those opposing migration, though in the minority, often are louder than those who want to help, she added.

      “These are people who don’t have a perspective of their own because of unemployment and economic difficulties, and they feel left out of society,” Peschke said. “Some of the populists promise them better chances when there are no migrants. Its not logic, but it’s how it happens.”

      Tanczos said European countries need to address the social insecurity many people feel in the face of globalization. On a local level, authorities need to further engage with the local communities where migrants are increasingly arriving, Peschke added. She called for more meeting spaces between migrants and community members in each community to reduce anxiety local residents might have about migrants.

      “Many of the parishes across Europe are doing this in many ways, and many people have overcome their hesitation,” she said.

      https://world.wng.org/2016/07/nigerian_asylum_seeker_murdered_in_italy

    • Da Fermo a Macerata, la vera emergenza è il fascismo

      “Scimmia africana”: così #Amedeo_Mancini aveva chiamato una giovane nigeriana prima di sferrare un pugno contro il marito, uccidendolo. Succedeva il 5 luglio 2016, meno di due anni fa, vicino al belvedere di Fermo, una cittadina marchigiana a 45 chilometri da #Macerata. Per l’omicidio di #Emmanuel_Chidi_Nnamdi, colpevole di aver reagito agli insulti rivolti alla sua compagna Chiniery, Amedeo Mancini, ultrà della #Fermana vicino ad ambienti neofascisti, è stato condannato a quattro anni di carcere con il patteggiamento e rimesso in libertà nel maggio del 2017, a nemmeno un anno dall’omicidio.

      All’epoca i difensori di Mancini invocarono la legittima difesa e accusarono la vittima di aver provocato l’aggressore. Dissero anche che Mancini, ex pugile, era vicino agli ambienti dell’estrema destra, ma non era fascista. A nemmeno due anni di distanza, un sabato mattina a Macerata, #Luca_Traini, 28 anni, entra in macchina e gira per la città sparando con una pistola Glock contro i passanti, vuole uccidere chi ha la pelle nera. #Jennifer_Odion, una ragazza nigeriana di 25 anni, è colpita da un proiettile alla spalla mentre si trova alla fermata dell’autobus. Si accascia per terra davanti allo sguardo incredulo del suo fidanzato. Traini riparte sulla sua Alfa nera e colpisce altre cinque persone in dieci punti della città. Sono tutti uomini, sono tutti richiedenti asilo. Nessuno di loro conosce Traini e ha mai avuto contatti con lui. Sconosciuti.

      https://www.internazionale.it/bloc-notes/annalisa-camilli/2018/02/05/macerata-fascismo-luca-traini
      #meurtre #fascisme

  • Ukraine’s Out of Control Arms Bazaar in Europe’s Backyard - The Daily Beast
    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2016/06/09/ukraine-s-out-of-control-arms-bazaar-in-europe-s-backyard.html

    “Today #Ukraine needs professional security services to control the militia who trade Kalashnikovs, hand grenades, RPGS, explosive devices, and TNT that they get out of land mines, a countless number that nobody counts,” says Gennady Gudkov, a former KGB officer now operating out of Moscow as a security consultant.

    #armes

  • Arsal in the Crosshairs: The Predicament of a Small Lebanese Border Town - International Crisis Group
    http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/middle-east-north-africa/syria-lebanon/lebanon/b046-arsal-in-the-crosshairs-the-predicament-of-a-small-lebanese-border

    Weakened by deepening inter- and intra-communal rifts, the Lebanese state has gradually abandoned its primary role in governance and as manager of representative politics and relies increasingly on security measures to maintain stability and the political status quo. The remote border town of Arsal in the north east is emblematic of this security-centric method of tackling unrest. The approach, which escalated after the Syrian war began next door, is short-sighted and dangerous, as it fights symptoms while inadvertently reinforcing underlying factors that drive instability. If the government were to address Arsal’s plight in a more balanced manner that takes those factors into account by folding its security component into an overall political strategy, it could yet turn a vicious circle into a virtuous one, preventing the town’s downward spiral and providing a model for tackling such problems in the country overall.

    Arsal combines many of Lebanon’s woes: economic erosion and poor governance at its fringes; sectarian fault lines shaping the fate of a Sunni enclave within a majority-Shiite governorate (Baalbek-Hermel) in the Beqaa Valley; the weakening of Sunni national leadership and growing assertiveness of Hizbollah, the Lebanese Shiite movement whose militia is actively fighting in Syria; and the spillover of the Syrian conflict. The latter has turned the town into a rear base for anti-regime fighters, a trans-shipment point for explosive devices, and – for both these reasons – a threat for Hizbollah and Lebanon’s security apparatus. It has also turned the town into an initial haven for waves of refugees, adding to severe pressures on both the Lebanese state and individual localities throughout Lebanon.

  • 3 Palestinians shot dead after Jerusalem attack kills Israeli officer
    Feb. 3, 2016 2:55 P.M. (Updated: Feb. 4, 2016 10:50 A.M.)
    http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770107

    JERUSALEM (Ma’an) — Three Palestinians were shot dead Wednesday after they killed an Israeli police officer and wounded another in an armed attack near Damascus Gate in occupied East Jerusalem’s Old City, Israeli police said.

    Israeli police spokesperson Micky Rosenfeld told Ma’an that “three attackers were shot dead at the scene” by Israeli Border Police after carrying out an attack with knives and an automatic weapon.

    The three Palestinian youths had attracted the attention of Israeli Border Police officers as they approached Damascus Gate, police spokesperson Luba al-Samri said.

    She said they were stopped by the officers, and as one showed their identification card, another pulled out a gun and opened fire. Two female Border Police officers were wounded and evacuated for medical treatment.

    One of them, 19-year-old Hadar Cohen, was shot in her head and later pronounced dead at Hadassah Hospital.

    A spokesperson for the hospital said that the other police officer, 18 years old, was in moderate condition, having received stab wounds across her body.

    Explosive devices were later found near the site, which was cordoned off following the attack, Rosenfeld said, adding that Israeli forces carried out a controlled explosion of the devices.

    Rosenfeld said following initial investigations that the three Palestinians were armed with three automatic weapons.

    Photo of weapon used at the scene. Photo provided by Israeli police spokesperson Micky Rosenfeld

    Witnesses told Ma’an that Israeli forces fired stun grenades and pepper spray near the Salah al-Deen Street and Al-Sultan Suliman streets near Damascus Gate to prevent Palestinians from approaching the area.

    Witnesses added the forces also stopped a group of people and inspected them in a “humiliating” way.

    The three Palestinians killed were identified as Ahmad Rajeh Ismail Zakarneh, Muhammad Ahmad Hilmi Kamil, and Najeh Ibrahim Abu al-Rub from the village of Qabatiya near the occupied West Bank city of Jenin.

    #Palestine_assassinée

    • Chaos erupts in hometown of 3 Palestinian attackers as Israeli forces raid village
      Feb. 4, 2016 10:37 A.M. (Updated: Feb. 4, 2016 12:18 P.M.)
      http://www.maannews.com/Content.aspx?id=770116

      JENIN (Ma’an) — Israeli forces stormed the northern occupied West Bank district of Jenin’s Qabatiya village, the home of three Palestinian youth who were shot dead Wednesday after killing one 19-year-old Israeli police officer and seriously injuring another, a PLO spokesman told Ma’an.

      Ali Zakarneh said during the raid, Israeli forces shot and injured four youth with live bullets, one of whom is in critical condition after being shot in the head.

      The spokesperson added that Israeli forces also ran over a 15-year-old boy, identified as Mujahed Zakarneh, with a military jeep. The 15-year-old is also in critical condition.

      The five youth were all evacuated to a nearby hospital for treatment, Zakarneh said.

      Israeli forces also raided the family homes of the three youth who committed the attack and notified the families that their homes would be demolished, requesting they evacuate their belongings in preparation for the demolitions.

    • Palestinian youths slain in deadly attack on Israeli police
      Maureen Clare Murphy | 4 February 2016
      https://electronicintifada.net/blogs/maureen-clare-murphy/palestinian-youths-slain-deadly-attack-israeli-police

      Nine youths from Qabatiya village have been killed since the beginning of October.

      One of them was a good friend of the three killed on Wednesday, a relative of one of the youths told The New York Times.

      Ahmad Awad Abu al-Rab, 17, was shot dead by Israeli soldiers at Jalameh checkpoint near Jenin during what Israel says was an attempted stabbing attack on 2 November last year. Another boy the same age, Mahmoud Kamil, was wounded and arrested during the incident.

      The Palestinian Centre for Human Rights called the shooting of the boys a crime of excessive force.

      The teens apparently never made contact with the soldiers before they were shot with live fire.

      The Quds news outlet published a photo of Muhammad Kamil participating in a demonstration calling on Israel to return the body Ahmad Awad Abu al-Rab:

  • Analysis / Brazen Hezbollah renews operations along Israel border - Israel must reexamine the prevailing assumption that Hezbollah is still deterred by the IDF following the 2006 war and is not interested in a confrontation.
    By Amos Harel | Oct. 20, 2014 Haaretz
    http://www.haaretz.com/news/diplomacy-defense/.premium-1.621630

    A recent article in Al-Akhbar, the Lebanese newspaper considered close to Hezbollah, seems to back Israeli claims that the Shi’ite organization has resumed overt military activity along the Israeli border – a clear violation of UN Security Council Resolution 1701, which ended the Second Lebanon War in 2006. This, along with taking responsibility for the two explosive devices that blew up on Mount Dov two weeks ago, may reflect a worrisome change in Hezbollah policy that in the long term could have problematic ramifications for Israel.

    On October 7, Hezbollah activated two explosive devices alongside a group of the Golani Brigade’s Egoz unit and an Engineering Corps bomb squad operating along the Lebanese border. Two Israel Defense Forces sappers were wounded.

    Hezbollah later announced that the operation was in response to the explosion of an Israeli spy installation that a Hezbollah sapper was trying to dismantle in south Lebanon on September 5.

    Resolution 1701 (from August 2006) forbids armed Hezbollah fighters south of the Litani River. Hezbollah’s claim of responsibility for the explosion is a blatant admission that it violated the resolution, which until now the group had been careful to publicly uphold. In mid-September, the IDF distributed photos in which Hezbollah fighters could be seen near the border fence, presumably gathering intelligence on IDF troop movements.

    The Middle East Media Research Institute, which monitors Arab media outlets, posted on its website a translation of the article from Al-Akhbar that appeared on October 8, the day after the explosions. The article states that the group has resumed operations south of the Litani, similar to its operations between the years 2000-2006 after the IDF had withdrawn from the security zone.

    The newspaper describes Hezbollah’s activities as a necessary response to the joint efforts by Israel and Sunni opposition groups on the Golan Heights working to depose the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

    The report, based on unidentified Lebanese sources, claims that Israel has intensified its cooperation with various opposition groups (including, it claims, even the Nusra Front, the extremist Sunni group identified with Al-Qaida). It warns that Israel is encouraging Sunni extremists to enter Lebanon through the Hermon region, and that it is planning to stir up residents of the Syrian Druze villages near Mount Hermon, which are trying to stay neutral in the civil war.

    The argument is that Israeli meddling in events in the tri-border region obligates Hezbollah to take extraordinary defensive measures. Accordingly, the explosive devices planted at Mount Dov were aimed at an IDF tank and were meant to warn Israel that it would pay a price for changing the rules of the game in Lebanon.

    The explosive charges that went off on Mount Dov were more sophisticated and deadly than those Hezbollah detonated there in March, when an IDF vehicle was damaged but there were no casualties. If the IDF forces had not acted carefully when approaching the devices this time, the incident could have ended with several deaths.

    These developments require that Israel reexamine the prevailing assumption that Hezbollah is still deterred by the IDF following the 2006 war, is further deterred by Israel’s display of military prowess in Gaza this summer, and, in general, is not interested in a confrontation with Israel because it is deeply entrenched in the Shi’ite-Sunni wars in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq.

    But the recent explosions were a gamble for Hezbollah. Assuming the group’s leadership expected the attack to succeed, it means Hezbollah was prepared to absorb at least one round of violence with Israel (based on its expected response to the deaths of its soldiers), if not an all-out war. This indicates Hezbollah’s self-confidence is growing, probably because its fighters are accumulating valuable battle experience in the Syrian civil war.

    There could be other reasons for Hezbollah’s actions. It might want to deflect attention from the internal struggles in Lebanon, in which the group has suffered losses at the hands of extremist Sunni groups like Islamic State. Hezbollah might also have been trying to establish a new deterrent balance with Israel, so the latter will stop attacking the group in Lebanese territory.

    According to the U.S. administration and Arab media, over the past two years the Israel Air Force has attacked several weapons convoys going from Syria to Lebanon; the most recent time, last February, the attack was on Lebanese soil. Now Hezbollah has raised the bar, Israel may have to rethink how to respond in the future.

    The question remains: what did Hezbollah expect to achieve with a direct attack on the IDF like the one at Mount Dov? Is the military experience it has gained in Syria being translated into new combat techniques and a different battle plan if there’s a flare-up with Israel? How will the group approach such a campaign, given its massive rearming with short-term rockets with large warheads over the past year – a move that could be evidence of a readiness to heavily bombard the border region?

    A whole line of senior Israeli defense officials say they do not, at this stage, see any change in Hezbollah’s interests or plans, and maintain that the group is not seeking a confrontation with the IDF. Still, it’s hard to forget that overconfidence led Hezbollah to make a bad move in 2006, when it kidnapped reserve soldiers on the border and sparked a war. One can’t rule out the possibility that such bad judgment could repeat itself.

  • Three suspected bomb makers killed in blast near Cairo
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/three-suspected-bomb-makers-killed-blast-near-cairo

    Three people are believed to have been killed in an explosion early on Friday at a house south of Cairo used for making bombs, the Eyptian state news agency MENA reported. The explosion was in a brick building in an agricultural area in the town of Abu Kasah in Fayoum province, it said, adding that experts found more than 20 explosive devices at the scene, which they were defusing. “Remains of bodies, estimated to be three, have been discovered and the identities are being determined,” MENA said. read more

    #Egypt

  • Explosions wound six policemen near Cairo
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/explosions-wound-six-policemen-near-cairo

    Two explosive devices detonated on Friday near a police station in Giza, on the outskirts of Cairo, wounding six policemen, the Interior Ministry and security sources said. The interior ministry said two small bombs exploded near policemen stationed on a bridge near central Cairo. At least six were wounded in the attack, the health ministry said. Police cordoned off the scene, where a lightly damaged police truck appeared to have borne the brunt of the blast. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the blasts. read more

    #Egypt #Top_News

  • Dozen wounded by roadside bombs in #Yemen
    http://english.al-akhbar.com/content/dozen-wounded-roadside-bombs-yemen

    Two roadside bombs exploded one after the other in the Yemeni capital on Thursday wounding 12 people, a security official said. The twin blasts were on the busy al-Rabat Street where the explosive devices had been hidden among piles of rubbish. No casualties were reported in the first explosion, the official said. But as pedestrians gathered in the area a second bomb went off, “wounding 12 people, four of them seriously,” he said. Cars were damaged in the blast that also shattered windows, (...)

    #Top_News

  • Résumé de ce que la LBCi considère comme désormais « certain » (j’ignore comment). Noter que les 20 attentats dans des soirées de rupture de jeune, pendant une tournée du Patriarche, dans le but de créer des tensions confessionnelles, qui étaient évoqués jusqu’à ce matin, ne font pas partie ici des choses « certaines ». Tel que c’est résumé ce soir, il s’agit d’assassinats politiques contre des personnalités que les Syriens considèrent comme impliquées dans le conflit armé. Ça n’est plus exactement la même nature de crime.
    http://lbcgroup.tv/news/45194/introduction-to-the-evening-news-12-08-2012

    The following facts are now certain: 

    Samaha transported the explosives from Syria to Lebanon following the request of Major General Ali Mamlouk, and he received them from General Adnan who is responsible for the containers of explosive devices, according to information made available to LBCI. 

    The targets included MP Kahled Daher, his brother, MP Mouin Merhebi and figures supporting the Syrian opposition. 

    The explosive devices are not similar to those used during the assassination of Georges Hawi or the assassination attempt against May Chidiac. According to security information to LBCI, the explosive are more developed and have a wider destructive capability. 

    The witness, whose real name is Miled Kfoury, and who has three fake names: Zouhair Nahhas, Amjad Srour and Majed Gharib, worked with late Minister Elie Hobeika in the security apparatus where Minister Samaha used to work.

    • Une partie des charges, selon le DailyStar. À nouveau, j’ignore d’où sortent ces « charges », alors que hier soir encore, le ministre de la Justice Chakib Qortbawi déclarait à Al-Ajadeed ne rien savoir des détails de l’enquête, laquelle doit rester confidentielle jusqu’à la publication d’un acte d’accusation.
      http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2012/Aug-13/184472-military-launches-samaha-probe.ashx

      Samaha, a former MP and two-time information minister, was charged Saturday by Lebanon’s Military Tribunal with plotting to assassinate political and religious figures in the country and planning terrorist attacks.

      In an unprecedented move, Mamlouk and a Syrian brigadier general, who was identified as Brig. Gen. Adnan, were also included in the indictment.

      Judge Sami Sader, the government’s deputy commissioner at the Military Tribunal, also charged the three men with “creating an armed group aimed at committing crimes against the people and undermining the state’s authority.”

      He also accused the three men of planning to “incite sectarian fighting through preparations to carry out terrorist attacks with explosives” Samaha transported to Lebanon and stored after taking possession of them from Mamlouk and Adnan.

      Sader also charged the three men with “planning to kill religious and political figures and working with the intelligence of a foreign state [Syria] to carry out aggression against Lebanon.” Samaha was also accused of possessing unlicensed weapons.