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TERROR WARS
Islamist threat evolving, more dangerous, European officials say
By Naomi Seck
Washington (AFP) Jan 19, 2015


Kerry to co-host talks on Islamic State in London
Washington (AFP) Jan 19, 2015 - US Secretary of State John Kerry will travel to London on Thursday to host with his British counterpart a meeting of members of the coalition against the Islamic State group.

Kerry's spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the one-day talks with foreign ministers from about 20 countries, including Arab states, would focus on "our shared efforts to degrade and defeat ISIL," an acronym by which the group is known.

A British official separately confirmed the meeting will take place at Lancaster House in central London, two weeks after deadly attacks in Paris by three gunmen claiming to act on behalf of Al-Qaeda and the IS group occupying parts of Iraq and Syria.

The meeting comes after US President Barack Obama and Prime Minister David Cameron met in Washington this week.

Discussions will focus on five areas -- foreign fighters, the military campaign against IS targets, its sources of finances, strategic communications and humanitarian assistance, the British official said.

While in London, Kerry will hold bilateral talks with British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, Psaki said.

He will then travel to the World Economic Forum in Davos taking place Thursday through Saturday to meet with global leaders, as well as business and civil society representatives.

The top US diplomat will deliver remarks at WEF's annual meeting on Friday.

Indonesia must toughen laws to combat IS: think-tank
Jakarta (AFP) Jan 19, 2015 - Indonesia could help combat the threat of homegrown extremism by banning its citizens from travelling abroad to fight with organisations such as the Islamic State group, a think-tank said Monday.

The Jakarta-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC) said new laws banning any involvement with foreign militant groups overseas were necessary to help stem the flow of fighters from Indonesia to battlegrounds in the Middle East.

More than 500 Indonesians have gone to Syria and Iraq to fight alongside IS militants, according to the country's counter-terror chief, prompting President Joko Widodo to consider new measures to combat the threat of homegrown radicalism.

Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim-majority nation, has already banned support for IS and its ideology.

But in its latest report, IPAC said police efforts to prevent future jihadists from travelling to Syria and Iraq would continue to face hurdles without appropriate legislation.

"As long as joining foreign military or terrorist organisations is not a crime, it is difficult to prosecute," the report said.

There are concerns internationally about the impending release from Indonesian jails this year and next of 130 inmates convicted of terrorism offences, a fear exacerbated by the presence of former prisoners among Indonesia's IS ranks.

Though IPAC found only a minority of the 270 people convicted of terror offences in Indonesian jails supported IS, it said some more extreme prisoners maintained strong links to outside groups and posed a serious threat.

Indonesia's most notorious radical cleric Abu Bakar Bashir swore allegiance to IS along with 23 other inmates at a Java prison in July.

Widodo is reportedly considering revoking the passports of Indonesians who have left for Syria, and is exploring other ways of charging those trying to join IS.

Indonesia has waged a crackdown on extremist groups for more than a decade following attacks against Western targets including the 2002 Bali bombings -- a campaign that has been credited with weakening key networks.

There are fears that fighters returning from Iraq or Syria could revive these networks.

European security officials are scrambling to meet a changing and more complex threat from jihadists -- both from sleeper cells and fighters returning from Middle Eastern battlegrounds -- made clear in the deadly Paris attacks.

European police agency chief Rob Wainwright said the security landscape is "more difficult, more challenging" than at any time since the September 11, 2001 attacks.

It is an extremely dangerous time, stressed British Prime Minister David Cameron, as he spoke of a "severe" threat in which an attack is "highly likely."

The three days of violence that left 17 dead in Paris last week -- starting when gunmen stormed into the offices of satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo January 7 -- have left the world reeling, with questions raised about how the perpetrators slipped through the cracks.

Some in Europe have called for tighter border controls and stricter immigration measures.

French far-right leader Marine Le Pen went further, calling for stripping "jihadists" of their French citizenship and urging Paris to denounce the attackers as "Islamists."

"Let us call things by their rightful names, since the French government seems reluctant to do so," she wrote in a New York Times op-ed.

"France, land of human rights and freedoms, was attacked on its own soil by a totalitarian ideology: Islamic fundamentalism."

- Working independently? -

The two Charlie Hebdo attackers, brothers Said and Cherif Kouachi, had ties to jihadist groups in Yemen and Syria.

Cherif and a third gunman, Amedy Coulibaly, who killed four hostages at a Jewish supermarket, had each spent time in jail where they were further radicalized.

But the three men had not been active in jihadist circles for nearly a decade before the Paris attacks, so police focused their attention elsewhere, Europol chief Wainwright said.

The challenge has shifted since Al-Qaeda's heyday under Osama Bin Laden, Wainwright stressed.

Police are seeing "a lot of independent or semi-independent people" who have been radicalized through the Internet or through experience fighting in Syria and Iraq, he told ABC's "This Week" in an interview that aired Sunday.

"Of course, that makes it much more dangerous. That's the challenge the police face," he said.

"It's much looser than we have seen before. It's not the same as in the days of 9/11, when we had an identifiable command and control structure."

US Senator Richard Burr said the Paris assault means authorities should re-evaluate how they monitor possible threats.

"Every country in the world today is probably looking back at the policies that they've got on surveillance for known fighters," the Republican lawmaker told CNN's "State of the Union."

- 'Perseverance' -

But Cameron spoke of a "very long" struggle against extremists.

"We'll have to show real perseverance," he said in an interview with CBS "Face the Nation" taped on Friday after his meeting with US President Barack Obama.

And the fight goes beyond just police and military action.

"We've also got to demonstrate that our values, that the things we stand for and care about in our societies -- of democracy and free speech and rights and the ability to have peaceful and progressive societies -- that those things are stronger" than the extremists' "poisonous death cult narrative," Cameron said.

"We cannot do this on our own as Western countries. We need functioning government in Iraq, functioning government in Syria, to be the legitimate authorities that with us, help to stand back this perversion of the Islamic religion.

"I think in a free society, there is a right to cause offense about someone's religion," Cameron added.

He noted that as a Christian, he might be offended by somebody's remarks about Jesus, "but in a free society I don't have a right to wreak my vengeance upon them."

Charlie Hebdo's new editor-in-chief, meanwhile, defended the caricatures in an interview with NBC's "Meet the Press."

"Every time we draw a cartoon of Mohammed, every time we draw a cartoon of prophets, every time we draw a cartoon of God, we defend freedom of religion," Gerard Biard said.

"If God becomes entangled in politics, then democracy is in danger."


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Algeria finds explosive vests near French beheading area
Algiers (AFP) Jan 17, 2015
Algerian soldiers discovered a cache of explosive vests and ammunition in the east of the country near where jihadists beheaded a French hostage in September, the defence ministry said Saturday. "In the framework of the anti-terrorist fight and a search operation near Iboudrarene (150 kilometres or 90 miles east of Algiers), the army... on Friday uncovered and destroyed on site five explosiv ... read more


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