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TERROR WARS
Libya fears Iraq-like jihadist scenario
by Staff Writers
Benghazi, Libya (AFP) June 1, 2015


Jordanians jailed for two years over IS links
Amman (AFP) June 1, 2015 - Jordan on Monday sentenced four people to two years in jail each for having tried to join the ranks of the Islamic State group and for promoting the jihadists online.

The kingdom is one of five Arab nations that joined a US-led air campaign against the Sunni extremist group that has declared a "caliphate" straddling the borders of neighbouring Iraq and Syria.

Since the start of the campaign in September 2014, Jordan has reportedly arrested dozens of suspected IS sympathisers and put several on trial.

The state security court, a military tribunal, found the four guilty of engaging in "propaganda on behalf of a terrorist group" and of trying to "join the ranks of armed and terrorist organisations".

The suspects, all in their early 20s, had denied the accusations against them.

Their charge sheet indicated one of them had tried to sneak across the border into Syria to join the jihadist group but was arrested by Jordanian security forces before being able to do so.

The others used social media networks to promote IS.

Jordan has borders with both Syria and Iraq and has reinforced security along its frontiers since the conflict erupted in Syria four years ago.

Libya's internationally recognised government called for outside help against military advances in the country by the Islamic State jihadist group and warned of an Iraq-like scenario.

"Libyan cities are coming under increased threat from this group and it will become difficult to confront them, like in Iraq," Prime Minister Abdallah Thani told a press conference on Sunday in Al-Baida in eastern Libya where his administration is based.

In remarks quoted on the government's official Facebook page, Thani said: "We are surprised that the international community has not taken a firm stand on what is taking place in Libya."

Thani renewed demands for a lifting of the international arms embargo, in place since Libya's 2011 NATO-backed uprising which toppled longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi, to defeat the IS jihadists, whose counterparts have seized control of swathes of Iraq and Syria.

IS took control of the airport in Sirte, Kadhafi's hometown east of Tripoli, after forces belonging to a Tripoli-based rival government withdrew last week.

Officials in Tripoli said IS had allied with supporters of the ousted Kadhafi regime to deploy across Sirte, which lies in a region rich in oil fields.

The Tripoli administration has also called for international help to combat IS, which has exploited the chaos in Libya since the 2011 revolution to make territorial gains.


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TERROR WARS
Foreign fighters switching tactics to reach Syria, Iraq
United Nations, United States (AFP) May 29, 2015
Foreign fighters bent on joining jihadists in Syria, Iraq and North Africa are changing tactics to avoid detection, increasingly resorting to tortuous travel routes and relying on middlemen, Interpol said Friday. Interpol chief Juergen Stock told a special UN Security Council meeting that intelligence-sharing was key to stopping would-be jihadists who are now flocking to war zones in record ... read more


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