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Libya militia says it arrests Al Qaeda leaders

By - Jul 25,2019 - Last updated at Jul 25,2019

TRIPOLI — A Libyan militia has arrested a number of Al Qaeda-linked leaders in a raid near the capital Tripoli, the group said.

The Misrata Joint Security Force carried out the raid against “wanted terrorists, classified as Al Qaeda leaders”, the group linked to the UN-recognised Government of National Accord’s interior ministry said on Facebook late Wednesday.

The dawn operation “in a suburb of Tripoli” on Wednesday led to the arrest of individuals “linked to attacks launched in the capital”, it said.

The main target, an Algerian national fighting under the name “Al Chaoui”, was rounded up along with several wanted Libyans, it added, without giving names or the total number arrested.

The force published a video of the raid, including footage of three people wearing blue uniforms with their hands bound.

It said it had also seized weapons, grenades, ammunition, documents and material used to produce explosives.

Libya has been gripped by chaos since a NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed Muammar Qadhafi in 2011.

Terrorists and people-traffickers have taken advantage of the unrest to gain a foothold in the north African country.

Rival administrations and multiple militias are now vying for power, with the Tripoli-based GNA that holds Libya’s west at odds with a parallel administration based in the country’s east and backed by strongman Khalifa Haftar. 

Haftar’s self-styled Libyan National Army launched an offensive on April 4 to take the capital, but his fighters have faced stiff resistance from GNA forces, including the powerful Misrata militia. 

At least 1,000 people have been killed in the battle for Tripoli, according to the World Health Organisation.

Cannes demands release of jailed Iranian film director Rasoulof

By - Jul 25,2019 - Last updated at Jul 25,2019

PARIS — The Cannes film festival called on Thursday for the “immediate and unconditional release” of the Iranian director Mohammad Rasoulof, who was jailed for a year for “attacking the security of the state”.

The dissident director — who was previously sentenced to six years in prison in 2010 for filming without a permit — won the Certain Regard section of the world's biggest film festival two years ago with his acclaimed film about small town corruption, “A Man of Integrity”.

As well as the prison sentence, an Iranian court also banned him from leaving the country for two years and getting involved in “any social or political activity”, according to the festival.

It expressed its “utmost dismay” at the verdict, saying in a statement that “facing the censorship imposed by the Iranian authorities”, Rasoulof “keeps telling the reality of his country”.

“Mohammad Rasoulof is a filmmaker, an artist. For this reason, he is now deprived of his freedom,” the festival added.

Rasoulof also won the Certain Regard best director prize in 2011 for “Goodbye” about a lawyer who is banned from working by the government.

Rasoulof made the movie while he himself was out on bail and banned from filmmaking.

His French distributor Michele Halberstadt told AFP that it was “absurd to accuse him of attacking the security” of the Islamic republic when the only weapon he had at his disposal was the “light and shadow of his palette”.

She said his passport had already been consficated, and that he had been banned from working and travelling freely since 2017.

Iranian filmmakers are regularly the target of the country's often opaque legal system, and subject to bans, restrictions and the threat of prison sentences.

Mogadishu mayor wounded in blast at his office

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

In this undated photo, people at the scene of an attack by Al Shabaab in Mogadishu, Somalia (AFP photo)

MOGADISHU — Mogadishu’s mayor and other top government officials were wounded in an explosion at his offices in the Somali capital, his deputy told state radio on Wednesday.

“The mayor was wounded in the blast and he is currently being treated. Some of the commissioners of Mogadishu district have also been wounded,” deputy mayor Mohamed Abdullahi Tulah told the government’s radio station Muqdisho.

A security source, who asked not to be named, said a suicide bomber had entered a hall where the officials were meeting and detonated the blast inside. 

Earlier United Nations special envoy James Swan had met with the mayor, Abdirahman Omar Osman, at the headquarters of the Banadir district, which encompasses Mogadishu, according to the mission’s Twitter account. 

However, UN sources told AFP he had left by the time of the explosion.

“The blast occurred inside but we are not sure what exactly caused it, some reports we are getting indicate it was caused by a suicide bomber... and there are casualties,”said security official Mahdi Abdirahman.

He did not give further details on the wounded.

“The blast was very heavy, and I saw people, fleeing some with shrapnel wounds outside the Banadir administration headquarters,” said witness Mohamud Shariif, referring to the regional government offices.

Mogadishu is regularly hit by attacks by the Al Qaeda linked Al Shabaab terrorist group, which has fought for more than a decade to topple the Somali government.

The city was on Monday struck by a car bomb which left 17 dead and more than two dozen wounded. 

Turkey unimpressed by US buffer zone ideas in Syria

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

Turkish-backed Syrian fighters attend a military exercise near the rebel-held town of Al Rai in the north of Aleppo province along the border with Turkey on Wednesday (AFP photo)

ISTANBUL — Turkey said on Wednesday that it was not satisfied with the buffer zone solutions offered by the United States in northern Syria, aimed at preventing clashes between Turkish and Kurdish forces. 

"The latest US proposals are not satisfactory," Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu told the state-run Anadolu news agency. 

"We should say things clearly: We have the impression that [the United States] is trying to buy time," he added.

"A deal must be reached quickly on a security zone. Our patience has run out."

The two countries began talks on Tuesday after Turkey repeatedly threatened to launch an offensive against Kurdish forces in Syria. The buffer zone idea was first mooted by US President Donald Trump in January.

The US has provided extensive support to the Syrian Kurdish YPG militia in Syria. 

The YPG has led the fighting against the Daesh group in Syria, but Ankara sees it as a terrorist off-shoot of Kurdish militants inside Turkey.

Turkey has launched two previous offensives into Syria against Daesh and the YPG, in 2016 and 2018 respectively.

Swedish owner of tanker seized by Iran says crew 'safe'

Tehran hints it is open to tanker swap

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

An image grab taken from a broadcast by Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting on Monday shows Iranian Revolutionary Guards in speedboats patrolling a tanker Stena Impero as it is anchored off the Iranian port city of Bandar Abbas (AFP photo)

STOCKHOLM — The Swedish company that owns the UK-flagged oil tanker seized by Iran said on Wednesday it had finally been able to contact its crew being held on board and they declared themselves "safe".

Stena Bulk said in a statement that the ship's captain "advised that everyone was safe with good cooperation with the Iranian personnel onboard".

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps seized control of the Stena Impero tanker last Friday as it was navigating through an international passage in the middle of the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow chokepoint at the entrance of the Gulf.

The ship has since been held off shore near Iran's southern port of Bandar Abbas.

Iranian officials have given varying reasons for its seizure and continued detention. 

Some, such as Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, said it was for breaching maritime regulations.

It has also been variously claimed that its transponder was turned off, it was going the wrong way along a shipping channel or had collided with an unidentified fishing vessel.

Others, such as parliamentary speaker Ali Larijani, said it was a tit-for-tat move responding to British commandos seizing an Iranian oil tanker on July 4 as it passed through Gibraltar's waters, under suspicion it was breaking EU sanctions on oil deliveries to Syria.

Iran has hinted it was open to a tanker swap, releasing the Stena Impero in exchange for its tanker, Grace 1, being allowed on its way.

Stena Bulk has been trying for days to have its representatives visit the Stena Impero and see the 23 detained crew members — who hail from India, Russia, Latvia and the Philippines — to verify their well-being and press for their release.

On Tuesday it insisted in a statement that the vessel was "in compliance with maritime regulations" when it was seized, with transponders functioning and using the right shipping traffic passage. "We can confirm that we are not aware of, and nor is there any evidence of a collision involving the Stena Impero," it said.

 

Seeking 'progress' from Iran 

 

While its representatives have not been able to physically see the crew, Stena Bulk said in its statement on Wednesday that it had had "direct communication" with the ship's captain since late Tuesday.

The CEO of Stena Bulk, Erik Hanell, said the company appreciated the ability to speak to the crew remotely and expressed hope “that this is a first sign that we will soon see more positive progress from the Iranian authorities”.

Britain has slammed the seizure of the Stena Impero as “state piracy” that threatened freedom of navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. 

It has called for a European naval mission to be set up in the Gulf, separate from US patrols, to ensure the safety of shipping there. France has expressed willingness to take part in an “observer” mission, with efforts being made to de-escalate the situation.

Israel fires missiles into south Syria — state media

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

BEIRUT — An Israeli missile attack targeted Syrian military positions held by the government and its allies early on Wednesday, Syria's state news agency said. 

The missiles were fired into the south of the country close to the Golan Heights, an area occupied by Israel.

"The Israeli enemy launched an aggression after midnight against the Tall Al Hara area," the SANA news agency said on Wednesday, adding that there were reports of damage to property. 

The attacks were earlier described as "probably Israeli" by the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, who said they targeted Tall Al Hara in Daraa province, south of Damascus, and two areas in the neighbouring province of Quneitra.

"The regime's anti-aircraft defence has been activated to counter the attack," director of the observatory Rami Abdel Rahman said.

"Some missiles have been shot down, others have hit their target."

The observatory reported "loss of life" without giving further details.

Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes in Syria since the beginning of the conflict in 2011, targeting forces loyal to President Bashar Assad and the regime’s allies Iran and Hizbollah.

The Syrian conflict has killed more than 370,000 people and drawn in world powers since it started with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.

Israeli strikes have previously targeted Tall Al Hara where Hizbollah has installed a radar system and the Syrian regime has erected anti-aircraft batteries, according to the observatory. 

At the end of June, six civilians and nine pro-government fighters were killed in Israeli strikes near Damascus and in the central province of Homs, it added.

Israel says it is determined to prevent its arch-foe Iran from entrenching itself militarily in Syria, where Tehran backs Assad’s regime.

Israel insists that it has the right to continue to target positions held by Iran and its Lebanese ally Hizbollah out of self-defence.

The strikes came after Hizbollah’s leader said earlier this month that the group’s rockets could reach key Israeli sites along the Mediterranean coast, including Tel Aviv.

Hassan Nasrallah also said that Iran was “able to bombard Israel with ferocity and force” but “will not start a war”.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu countered that his country would deliver a “crushing military blow” on the both Hizbollah and Lebanon if it were to attack.

Sudan murals commemorate protest ‘martyrs’

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

Sudanese activist Eythar Gubara (left) walks in front of a mural painting of Mohamed Mattar, on the wall of a youth club in Bahri in the capital Khartoum’s northern district, on Sunday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Sudanese protester Walid Abdelrahim was shot dead last month in Khartoum but for his mother he is still alive — thanks to a colourful mural of his smiling face on a wall of their home.

“The painting keeps him alive,” said Maiyssa Omar, her voice choking as she talked of her son, who was killed during a three-day nationwide civil disobedience campaign in June.

The campaign had been launched in response to a brutal raid on a weeks-long sit-in in the capital on June 3 that left dozens of demonstrators dead and hundreds wounded.

“When I see his painting ... it gives me strength. I feel proud to be a mother of a martyr,” Omar told AFP as she looked at her son’s face painted on the wall of their one-storey house in Bahri, a northern district in Khartoum.

The portrait is part of a campaign launched by Sudanese artist Assil Diab to draw murals and graffiti to commemorate demonstrators killed in the months-old protest movement that has rocked the northeast African country.

Doctors close to the protest movement say 246 people have been killed across Sudan since demonstrations erupted in December. Officials have given a lower death toll.

The protests initially broke out against the regime of veteran leader Omar Al Bashir. Following his ouster by the army on April 11, protesters continue to agitate against the ruling generals who seized power.

These murals are specifically drawn on the walls of protesters’ own homes or in their neighbourhoods.

Diab, a former employee of Doha-based Al Jazeera television network, and her team got their motivation from a protest catch cry: “Our martyrs didn’t die, they are alive among the revolutionaries!”

“The idea is to immortalise their legacy in their own homes and to make the people of their neighbourhoods proud of a martyr who sacrificed his life for Sudan,” Diab, 29, told AFP by telephone from Doha.

“Graffiti makes martyrs come alive and reminds people of them even if the people themselves did or did not support the revolution.”

Diab, who lives in the Qatari capital with her family but often returns to her homeland, said painting each mural costs her about $635 given the high prices of colours and tools she uses.

“But martyrs took to the streets and died for us. This is the least we can do for them,” said Diab, who has drawn about 30 portraits of protesters killed in Khartoum.

For years such artwork remained underground amid censorship imposed by heavy-handed security agents of Bashir’s regime, who considered it anti-establishment or pure vandalism.

But artists say everything changed since the protests erupted, with dozens of murals flourishing across Khartoum’s walls since the initial weeks of the uprising.

The capital’s neighbourhoods like Bahri, a regular site of protests, became a canvas for artists like Diab.

One such painting on a blue coloured wall of a youth club in Bahri is of protester Mohamed Mattar, who was one of dozens killed in the June 3 raid on the protest camp.

“This painting inspires me to participate in the protests to achieve the demand of those who died for us,” said Bahri resident Mujahid Sadeq.

“I didn’t know Mattar before, but now we all know him.”

‘Dangerous experience’ 

 

A student in Britain, Mattar was back to visit family and had just celebrated his 26th birthday when he decided to spend a night with the demonstrators at the sit-in.

His death in the raid had evoked a campaign of solidarity on social media under the hashtag #blueformattar.

“We decided to draw his face here because this is a big area where the maximum number of people can see it,” said Eythar Gubara, a member of Diab’s team.

Some of the paintings Diab has drawn are also of protesters killed in a September 2013 crackdown on anti-austerity rallies.

They include Babikir Anwar whose face Diab has drawn on a wall of his family’s home in the neighbourhood of Shambat.

“We will not forget you Bakur,” is written below the painting, referring to his nickname.

“It makes me feel that he is with me, as if he is sitting in front of me,” said Anwar’s mother Adawiya Mohamed, dressed in a black traditional robe.

“I’m happy that Sudan still remembers his legacy.”

Diab said drawing the graffiti had not been easy.

Often her team faced resistance from the feared paramilitary group the Rapid Support Forces, who are accused by rights group of carrying out the June 3 raid.

“It was a dangerous experience, but worth taking the risks,” Diab said.

“I was interested in immortalising the legacy of these martyrs in the best way that I knew ... through graffiti.”

Iranian may face execution over prisoner murder — media

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

TEHRAN — One of two men sentenced over the murder of a fellow inmate at a prison in Tehran last month could face execution, Iran’s Resaalat newspaper reported on Wednesday.

Alireza Shirmohammad-Ali was stabbed “more than 30 times” on June 10, according to his lawyer Mohammad Hadi Erfanian.

The 21-year-old had been sentenced to eight years in prison for “insulting the sanctities, insulting high-ranking officials and spreading propaganda against the system” of the Islamic republic, the lawyer said.

He had been due to appear before an appeals court on July 9.

The two men sentenced over his murder, who have not been identified, were also serving time at Fashafooyeh prison in south Tehran.

Resaalat quoted judiciary spokesman Gholamhossein Esmaili as saying the court had issued a verdict of “qesas”, or Islamic law of retribution, for the main convict.

Under the “eye-for-an-eye”” form of punishment in Iranian law, the families of murder victims can demand the death penalty.

The judiciary’s official news agency Mizan Online reported in June that Shirmohammad-Ali’s family had asked for both the convicts to be executed.

“The second-degree defendant charged with being an accessory to premeditated murder was convicted to 25 years in jail,” Esmaili said in comments published on Wednesday, adding the verdicts could still be appealed.

In June, Erfanian had questioned the choice of detention centre, as prisoners facing such charges are usually kept at Tehran’s Evin prison.

“I don’t understand why [Shirmohammad-Ali] was sent to Fashafooyeh... as the law insists on the segregation of prisoners,” the lawyer said.

“The prison director, the chief guard and other officials of the prison must be held accountable,” he was quoted as saying in media reports at the time.

A prominent member of parliament had also protested the choice of prison in Shirmohammad-Ali’s case.

“A political prisoner should not be kept in a ward where thieves, murderers and smugglers are kept so that such a thing would not happen,” Tehran MP Ali Motahari said, according to news agencies.

Libya navy seizes Italian fishing boat

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

TRIPOLI — The Libyan navy said on Tuesday it seized an Italian-flagged fishing vessel and is questioning its crew in the western port city of Misrata.

“A coastguard patrol... seized on Tuesday night an Italian fishing boat in [Libyan] territorial waters with seven sailors on board, five Italians and two Tunisians,” said Colonel Rida Issa of the marine forces loyal to the UN-recognised Government of National Accord (GNA). 

The boat was steered into the port of Misrata where the seven crew members are being questioned, Issa said at a press conference.

The Italian foreign ministry confirmed the seizure in a statement, adding that the reasons behind it “are not yet clear” but are “likely related to fishing activities”. 

The Italian coast is some 300 kilometres from Libya, and there are recurring tensions between Italian and Libyan fishing boats in the area. 

Italian Foreign Minister Enzo Moavero Milanesi “instructed the Italian ambassador Guiseppe Buccino to work quickly... [to ensure] the correct treatment and rapid release of the crew and boat”, according to the statement. 

Libya has been mired in chaos since the ouster and killing of Muammar Qadhafi in a 2011 NATO-backed uprising.

Two authorities are now vying for power — the GNA based in Tripoli and a parallel administration in the east of the country backed by forces loyal to strongman Khalifa Haftar. 

Hafter launched an offensive to take Tripoli on April 4 and fighting continues south of the capital between Haftar’s forces and those of the GNA, including a powerful Misrata militia. 

6,000 migrants arrested in Istanbul crackdown

By - Jul 24,2019 - Last updated at Jul 24,2019

ISTANBUL — A crackdown on unregistered migrants in Istanbul has seen 6,000 arrests in the past two weeks, the interior minister said on Wednesday.

There has been concern in recent days over reports that hundreds of Syrian refugees have been sent back to Syria, after being forced to sign consent forms in Turkish that they do not understand. 

 “We have been carrying out an operation since July 12... We have caught 6,122 people in Istanbul, including 2,600 Afghans,” Interior Minister Suleyman Soylu told TV station NTV. 

He said Syrians were part of the group, without giving numbers. 

“When we catch Syrians who are not registered, we send them to refugee camps,” he said, citing a camp in the Turkish border province of Hatay. 

However, he said some Syrians were choosing to go back to their home country “voluntarily” to areas where fighting has abated. 

Turkey has more than 3.5 million Syrian refugees — the highest number in the world. 

Most have “temporary protection” permits but these restrict them to the province in which they were registered. The current crackdown is aimed at those who live in Istanbul without a permit to stay in the city.

A coalition of Syrian NGOs said on Monday that more than 600 Syrians — mostly with protection permits issued in other provinces — were arrested in Istanbul last week and deported back to Syria, rather than to their assigned provinces. 

The crackdown is orchestrated by the Istanbul governor’s office, which is controlled by the central government in Ankara. 

It follows the defeat of President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s AKP Party in the Istanbul party, with some arguing that the large presence of refugees in the city had hurt the ruling party’s popularity. 

The governor’s office says there are 547,000 Syrians registered in the city. 

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