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TERROR WARS
Black prevails in Syria jihadist stronghold
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) Sept 21, 2014


Wife of British IS hostage pleads for his release
London (AFP) Sept 20, 2014 - The wife of a British taxi driver being held hostage by Islamic State jihadists implored his captors to release him, saying Saturday she could not see how his death could assist any cause.

Alan Henning, a Briton who volunteered to drive a humanitarian aid convoy to Syria for a Muslim charity, was captured 10 months ago and is in the hands of the IS group.

In a statement released through Britain's Foreign Office, Barbara Henning urged his captors to "see it in their hearts to release my husband", given the circumstances in which he was in Syria.

The 47-year-old father of two teenage children was shown in the same video released a week ago that documented the gruesome murder of fellow Briton David Haines.

"Alan is a peaceful, selfless man who left his family and his job as a taxi driver in the UK to drive in a convoy all the way to Syria with his Muslim colleagues and friends to help those most in need," his wife said.

"When he was taken he was driving an ambulance full of food and water to be handed out to anyone in need.

"His purpose for being there was no more and no less. This was an act of sheer compassion.

"I cannot see how it could assist any state's cause to allow the world to see a man like Alan dying."

Barbara Henning said she had been trying to communicate with IS and had sent some "really important messages" but had received no response.

"I pray that the people holding Alan respond to my messages and contact me before it is too late," she said.

"When they hear this message I implore the people of the Islamic State to see it in their hearts to release my husband Alan Henning."

The taxi driver's family live in Manchester, northwest England. He joined a group of Muslim friends who founded the charity "Aid4Syria" and even had the name tattooed on his arm.

Eradicating poverty will defeat extremists: Kerry
Washington (AFP) Sept 19, 2014 - Top US diplomat John Kerry Friday made a passionate plea to wipe out poverty and improve health and education as the most powerful antidote to the "toxic" beliefs of extremists.

"Whether it's ISIL or Boko Haram or Al-Shebab, their ideology does not include a plan to build a nation," Kerry said, addressing a forum dedicated to global development.

"They don't have a plan to create jobs or deliver opportunity. They don't have any of those things that people most want. But they do have a strategy to capitalize on the grievances of those who feel under-represented and left behind," the US secretary of state said.

Unveiling plans to pour $63 million into Kenya, Tanzania, Zambia, Nigeria, Vietnam to help boost public health, especially to fight AIDS and HIV, Kerry said: "Investing in the foundations of economic growth -- health, education, food security -- is absolutely critical."

"When extremists measure their success by what they destroy, we are compelled to measure ours by what we're building," Kerry insisted.

"When extremists succeed from stoking old hatreds, we succeed by imagining new solutions and delivering opportunity."

The top US diplomat warned there were extremists who "want to prey on young people's frustrations, who want to seduce people to follow them in a very calculated way into a dead end."

Forging a global coalition to go after the Islamic State group which has seized a swath of territory in Iraq and Syria, "is the last thing that we wanted to have to do," Kerry said, just hours before chairing a meeting of the UN Security Council dedicated to the threat posed by the Islamic militants.

In the Syrian stronghold of the Islamic State jihadist group, everything is black, activists say, from men's turbans to women's veils. Even the passports.

"Black IS flags are everywhere. Women are covered from head to toe in black burqas, and can only leave the house in the company of their fathers, brothers or husbands," said Abu Yusef, an activist from Raqa province, which IS considers its headquarters.

Asked what colour IS passports are, he laughed: "Black."

IS members parade on the streets with their weapons -- usually Kalashnikovs assault rifles or pistols -- while non-members are not allowed to own arms, he told AFP via the Internet.

They exert control over every aspect of life, with men and women controlled by separate security forces.

"The Khansaa brigade is composed of women IS members. They are armed, and have the power to stop and search any woman on the street," said Abu Yusef.

"Daesh's version of Islamic law is imposed by the men's Hesbeh brigade," he said, using the Arabic acronym for IS.

IS also has "ministries for everything you can imagine: education, health, water, electricity, religious affairs and defence. All the ministries occupy ex-government buildings."

Education is based on a strict interpretation of Islamic law, and military training camps for young boys have been set up in Raqa, Abu Yusef said.

"There is even a consumer protection authority," he said.

- Jihadist-only coffeeshops -

Activists in Raqa have frequently complained that the jihadists have access to recreation but forbid it for others.

They post photographs online showing jihadist-filled coffeeshops in Raqa, while complaining that non-fighters are not allowed to enjoy public spaces.

In Deir Ezzor, where locals tried in vain to keep IS out, none of the coffeeshops that are so popular elsewhere in the Middle East remain open.

"Nothing good or fun is allowed," activist Rayan al-Furati told AFP via the Internet.

"It is impossible to even imagine anyone smoking, or anyone selling tobacco products. It is impossible to see a woman without a full veil. And every day, when the muezzins call for prayer, everybody closes their shops and goes to the mosque, or else they face detention."

For the group's jihadists, however, life in IS-controlled parts of Syria is good, not least because of the benefits they get.

The lowest IS cadres are paid $300 (235 euros) a month, said Raqa-based activist Furat al-Wafaa, using a pseudonym to protect his identity.

"In the current circumstances, that's a lot of money," he said via the Internet.

Wafaa said the group's generosity does not extend to those under its rule.

"Daesh is not really a state. It gives its members all the services they want, but other citizens get no part in that.

"It's a mafia that rules through terror. And people are forced by hunger to join, because that's the only way to get a proper salary."

At the same time, IS collects taxes from the population.

"Even those too poor to pay have to comply. So people are joining because they face the choice of starving, or joining in the extortion," he said.

Shopkeepers impoverished by a nearly four-year war pay some $60 a month in tax to the IS, he said.

- 'Settler occupation' -

Deir Ezzor's Furati, meanwhile, likened IS to a settler movement that has displaced the local population.

"Just as Israel occupied Palestine with settlers, the same thing has happened here," said the activist, who like tens of thousands of residents recently fled Deir Ezzor for fear of persecution.

"You have foreign jihadists, even Americans, living with their families where we once lived," said Furati, using a pseudonym to protect family members still in the province.

The jihadists have kept the oil and gas fields, electricity plants and dams in areas under their control running.

They pay employees an extra salary to continue working, adding to their uninterrupted monthly wages from the Syrian government.

Furati said employees belonging to President Bashar al-Assad's minority Alawite sect had long fled when IS arrived in Deir Ezzor and other employees have been kept on.

"Those employees still working the oil and gas fields were given guarantees they wouldn't be harmed, and Libyan engineers were brought in to support them," he said.

But power cuts and water shortages in IS-controlled areas are endemic, activists say, adding to the woes of those living under their rule.

Nael Mustafa, another activist still living in Raqa, said there is no separation between the public and the private in IS-controlled areas.

IS forces have no qualms about raiding homes and searching phones and computers for evidence of what they consider immoral practices.

"They believe that everything belongs to God -- and therefore comes under their control," he told AFP.

.


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