You are here

Region

Region section

Qatar announces first major gas deal for Germany

By - Nov 29,2022 - Last updated at Nov 29,2022

DOHA — Qatar on Tuesday announced its first major deal to send liquefied natural gas to Germany as Europe scrambles to find alternatives to Russian energy sources.

Qatar's Energy Minister Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi said up to two million tonnes of gas a year would be sent for at least 15 years from 2026, and that state-run QatarEnergy was discussing other possible deals for Europe's biggest economy.

Kaabi, who is also QatarEnergy's chief executive, said so many European and Asian countries now want natural gas that he did not have enough negotiators to cope.

The talks for the latest deal took several months as Germany has resisted the long-term contracts that Qatar normally demands to justify its massive investment in the industry.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February increased pressure on the German government to find new sources. And the latest deal will not help the country get through the looming winter.

The gas will be bought through US firm ConocoPhillips, a long-term partner with QatarEnergy, and sent to a new terminal that Germany is hurrying to finish at Brunsbuttel.

“We are committed to contribute to the energy security of Germany and Europe at large,” Kaabi told a press conference after the signing ceremony with ConocoPhillips Chief Executive Ryan Lance.

Lance hailed the accord as “a vital contribution to world energy security”.

Qatar last week announced a 27-year agreement to ship four million tons a year to China. It said this was the longest contract agreed in the industry.

Qatari officials would not discuss prices but industry analysts have said Germany will have to pay a premium for the shorter contract and the hurried start to deliveries.

 

 Intense demand 

 

Kaabi again stressed the “sizeable investments” that his country has made in extracting gas for deliveries around the world.

But he also said that Qatar was negotiating with German companies to further increase the “volumes” being sent.

The gas will come from the North Field East and North Field South projects that Qatar is developing with ConocoPhillips and other energy multinationals. North Field contains the world’s biggest natural gas reserves and extends under the Gulf into Iranian territory.

Through expansion in North Field, Qatar is aiming to increase its production by 60 per cent by 2027. With increases in international prices, the value of its exports has almost doubled in the past year, state media said recently.

Asian countries led by China, Japan and South Korea have been the main market for Qatar’s gas, but it has been increasingly targeted by European countries since Russia’s war on Ukraine threw supplies into doubt.

“There is very intense discussions with European buyers and with Asian buyers,” Kaabi said, highlighting the “scarcity of gas coming in the next few years”.

“We do not have enough teams to work with everybody, to cater for the needs” of all countries making demands.

Kaabi said the deal with China’s Sinopec showed that “Asian buyers are feeling the pressure of wanting to secure long-term deals... I think we are in a good position”.

The Brunsbuttel terminal supplies customers of German energy companies Uniper and RWE, and Economy and Energy Minister Robert Habeck said the two firms “have to buy on the world market”.

“It is clear that the world market has different suppliers, and it is smart from the companies to buy the most favourable offers for the consumers on the world market, and that includes Qatar,” he said.

Bill Farren-Price, head of macro oil and gas research at energy data analytics firm Enverus, said the deal underlines Qatar’s “key role” in filling the Russian gas shortfall.

“With Qatar the subject of Western criticism over its staging of the World Cup, this deal, like the Sinopec one a few days ago, shows just how significant Qatari LNG will be in rebuilding European energy security,” he told AFP.

 

Iran’s supreme leader takes Iraqi PM to task over security

By - Nov 29,2022 - Last updated at Nov 29,2022

This handout photo provided by the Iranian presidency shows Iran’s President Ebrahim Raisi (right) and Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohamed Shia Al Sudani (left) shaking hands during a joint press conference in the capital Tehran on Tuesday (AFP photo)

TEHRAN — Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei cast doubt on Baghdad’s commitment to secure their common border during talks on Tuesday in Tehran with new Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al Sudani.

Ties between the two neighbours have lately been strained by tensions over Iran carrying out cross-border strikes against exiled Kurdish opposition groups it accuses of fomenting unrest at home.

Responding to a pledge by Sudani that he would not allow Iraqi territory to be used to undermine Iran’s security, Khamenei said: “unfortunately, this is currently occurring in some parts of Iraq”.

Sudani’s meeting with the supreme leader followed talks with Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi during which they identified fighting “terrorism”, mutual security and economic cooperation as key priorities.

Sudani was on his first official visit to Tehran after becoming prime minister last month, following a year-long tussle between political factions over forming a government following an October 2021 general election.

“From our perspective and that of the Iraqi government, security, peace, cooperation and regional stability are very important,” Raisi told a joint news conference.

Sudani said that “our government is determined not to allow any group or party to use Iraqi territory to undermine and disrupt Iran’s security”.

Since nationwide protests erupted in Iran more than two months ago, officials have accused Kurdish opposition groups exiled in northern Iraq of stoking the unrest and the Islamic republic has repeatedly launched deadly cross-border strikes.

Strikes targeting Iranian-Kurdish groups in Iraq’s autonomous Kurdistan region resumed this month, even after Iraq’s federal government summoned Iran’s ambassador in late September to complain about cross-border missile and drone hits that killed at least seven people.

On Tuesday Khamenei urged Sudani to take a tougher line.

“The only solution is for the Iraqi government to extend its authority” to regions that are undermining Iran’s security, he said, referring to Iraqi Kurdistan.

Iraq has announced in the past week that it will redeploy federal guards on the border between Iraqi Kurdistan and Iran, rather than leaving the responsibility to Kurdish peshmerga forces — a move welcomed by Tehran.

On Tuesday, Sudani said that Iraqi and Iranian national security advisers would hold consultations to “establish a working mechanism for on-the-ground coordination to avoid any escalation”.

He also thanked Iran for its continued deliveries of gas and electricity, which have been in short supply in Iraq.

Raisi said banking, finance and wider business topics were also discussed and that talks between the two allies “will help to resolve bilateral problems”.

 

Syrian Kurdish forces urge Russia to stop Turkish offensive

By - Nov 29,2022 - Last updated at Nov 29,2022

Fighters affiliated with the third corps of the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army fire rounds while standing above a dirt barrier at a position near Azaz in the rebel-held north of the Aleppo province, opposite the town of Minaq along the frontlines with areas under control by Syrian government forces and the Syrian Democratic Forces, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Kurdish-led forces in northern Syria have called on Russia to dissuade Turkey from launching a threatened ground offensive against them, their commander said on Tuesday.

Turkey has carried out air strikes against semi-autonomous Kurdish zones in north and northeastern Syria, as well as Iraq, since a deadly Istanbul bombing it blames on Kurdish groups.

It has also threatened a ground offensive in those areas of Syria.

“We urged them [the Russians] to stop the Turkish attacks,” said Mazloum Abdi, commander-in-chief of the Syrian Democratic Forces [SDF], the Kurds’ de facto army in northern Syria.

“The Turks insist on launching an operation on the ground. They are preparing for it... for us, it will be a battle for our existence,” he added.

Turkey accuses Kurdish groups of being behind the bombing that killed six people in Istanbul on November 13, including the People’s Protection Units (YPG), which dominates the SDF.

Kurdish groups and authorities have denied responsibility for the Istanbul attack.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said last week that Turkey was more determined than ever to secure its border with Syria from attacks by Kurdish forces, threatening a ground operation “at the most convenient time”.

Both Russia, an ally of the Syrian government, and the United States have called for de-escalation.

Abdi called on foreign powers to respect a 2019 Russian-brokered agreement that saw Syrian government forces deploy along the northern border in exchange for Turkey halting an earlier offensive.

“We have no problem increasing the number of government troops,” said the SDF commander, who met with the chief of Russian forces in Syria at the weekend.

The Syrian government does not recognise the US-backed Kurdish administration’s self-rule in the country’s north.

Since 2016, Turkey has launched several incursions against Kurdish forces in northern Syria that have allowed it to control areas along the border.

Erdogan has vowed to protect Turkey’s southern frontier and has long sought to establish a “safe zone” with a depth of 30 kilometres inside Syria.

Abdi, who has long criticised the “weak” response of SDF ally Washington, appealed for a “stronger stance from all parties involved to stop the attack”.

If Turkey carries out its threats, “we will be forced to expand the scope of the war” to include the entire Syrian border, he said.

US troops support the SDF, which led the battle that dislodged the Islamic State group from the last scraps of Syrian territory held by the jihadist group in 2019.

Around 75 people, most of them SDF and allied fighters but also civilians and Syrian soldiers, have been killed in Turkey’s latest strikes, said the Syrian Observatory for Human rights, a Britain-based war monitor.

 

As Palestinian flags fly at World Cup, Israeli symbols hidden

By - Nov 28,2022 - Last updated at Nov 28,2022

DOHA — Palestinian flags are flying everywhere in Qatar but Israeli fans are staying low-key as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict makes its presence felt at the first World Cup on Arab soil.

Despite moves by some Arab countries, not including Qatar, to normalise relations with Israel, the Palestinian cause is being embraced by many Arab fans and some officials.

Terse interactions between Arab supporters and Israeli media have gone viral, including footage shot by an AFP journalist of a Saudi fan berating an Israeli TV reporter that has been viewed more than 5.2 million times on Twitter.

"There is only Palestine, there is no Israel... you are not welcome here," the fan shouts at Moav Vardi, a reporter for Israel's public broadcaster Kan.

The Arab fans flooding Qatar have been refusing to speak with Israel media, while some yell "Long Live Palestine" in front of Israeli television cameras.

"We find it very difficult to work here," Vardi told AFP, adding that he understood the Arab anger.

Many Qataris have put the Palestinian flag next to their own national emblem, hanging from the windows of their luxury cars.

Some Qataris sitting in a stadium VIP section have worn armbands showing the Palestinian keffiyeh head-dress, while the Palestinian song "Ali Al-Keffiyeh" (Raise Your Keffiyeh) is regularly played in fan zones.

"Some foreigners do not know the Palestinian flag and ask us about it," said Yahya Abu Hantash, a 33-year-old Palestinian living in Doha.

"This is a golden opportunity to introduce our cause," said Hantash, who wore a Qatar football shirt while holding a Palestinian flag.

Qatar has no relations with Israel and remains a supporter of the decades-long Palestinian cause for statehood.

Doha supports Hamas, the Palestinian Islamist group that rules the Gaza Strip, and provides vital financial aid to residents of the coastal enclave blockaded by Israel since 2007.

While Palestinian symbols are ubiquitous, an Israeli fan, who gave his name as Haim, said Qatar was his fourth World Cup but the first where he has not brought the national flag.

“I feel like I’m watching the World Cup in disguise. The atmosphere towards us is hostile,” said Haim, who has also taken off the silver Star of David that normally hangs around his neck.

The Israeli government advised football fans to hide Jewish “symbols” as part of its “Safe World Cup” campaign.

Haim, 57, came with his two sons on a charter flight from Tel Aviv airport operated by a Cypriot low-cost carrier.

 

Direct flights 

 

About 10,000 Israelis are expected in Qatar for the football tournament, according to diplomat Alon Levy who was in Doha to organise consular coverage.

FIFA hailed a deal allowing Palestinians and Israelis to travel to the Gulf emirate on special charter flights from Tel Aviv as a platform “to improve relations across the Middle East”.

Qatar insisted that Palestinians be allowed to travel with Israelis as a condition for allowing the direct flights, which will stop after the December 18 World Cup final.

Travel officials indicated there were no Palestinians on the first two direct flights, although some were expected on the third, flying on Tuesday.

A Palestinian official, who requested anonymity, said “no one” spoke about the flights agreement with the Palestinian Authority, which is based in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. “We learned the news from television.”

Israel has occupied the Palestinian territories of East Jerusalem and the West Bank since the 1967 June War fought with Arab nations.

Most Palestinians get to Qatar through Jordan or Egypt, as Israel severely restricts access to Tel Aviv airport, the official said.

About 250,000 Palestinians live in Qatar which has a population of around 2.9 million, most of them foreigners.

Together with fans who number in the tens of thousands, at least, from other Arab countries including World Cup participants Saudi Arabia, Tunisia and Morocco, pro-Palestinian support is strong.

Suhaib Al Issa, a 16-year-old Jordanian, said flying the flag was a sign of “peaceful resistance to express our rejection of normalisation with a country that occupies Palestine”.

The Qatar government did not comment on the handling of Israeli nationals during the World Cup.

Cocaine ‘super-cartel’ busted in Europe and Dubai

By - Nov 28,2022 - Last updated at Nov 28,2022

This video grab taken from footage released on Monday by Europol shows Spanish Guardia Civil Police detaining suspects in an undisclosed place in Spain as part of a drug trafficking investigation (AFP photo)

THE HAGUE — Police have smashed a huge drugs “super-cartel” that controlled a third of Europe’s cocaine trade, arresting 49 people in various countries including six kingpins in the gang’s hub in Dubai, Europol said on Monday.

The international operation codenamed “Desert Light” seized more than 30 tonnes of the white powder and led to arrests in Belgium, France, The Netherlands and Spain, the European Union’s police agency said.

The crackdown in Dubai netted a “big fish” from The Netherlands, who reportedly had links to alleged Dutch crime boss Ridouan Taghi, who was himself seized in the Gulf emirate in 2019.

“The drugpins, considered as high-value targets by Europol, had come together to form what was known as a ‘super cartel’ which controlled around one third of the cocaine trade in Europe,” Europol said.

“The scale of cocaine importation into Europe under the suspects’ control and command was massive”.

The Dutch suspect had allegedly formed an alliance in Dubai with the leaders of Irish and Italian drug gangs who were also arrested, Dutch public broadcaster NOS said.

A video released by Europol showed agents including some from the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) and Spanish Guardia Civil arresting suspects and seizing luxury cars and hidden stashes of cash.

 

‘Extremely big fish’ 

 

Dubai arrested two “high-value” suspects who are linked to France, two connected to The Netherlands and another two linked to Spain, Europol said.

Europol spokesman Jan Op Gen Oorth said it was a “textbook example of an international operation into the most dangerous organised crime groups”.

“The Emirates were a safe haven for criminals... but this time is over,” he told AFP in The Hague. “We have excellent cooperation with Dubai police so criminals have to look for some different spot to hide.”

The seizure of 30 tonnes of cocaine in one fell swoop would have a “big impact”, he said. European authorities had seized 240 tonnes in total across the continent in 2021, he added.

Ten people were arrested in Belgium, six in France and 13 in Spain during the operation from November 8 to 19. Another 14 people were arrested last year in The Netherlands as part of the same operation, Europol said.

They are the latest in a series of arrests around Europe that followed a police hack of sophisticated encrypted telephones used by organised crime networks last year, Europol said.

For the most part the cocaine came from South America through the ports of Rotterdam and Antwerp, although some had passed through South Africa.

Dutch prosecutors said they would request the extradition of the two Dutch nationals arrested in Dubai.

One is a 40-year-old dual Dutch-Bosnian national, named by Dutch media as Edin G., who was reportedly wanted by the US DEA for his links to Ridouan Taghi.

Moroccan-born Taghi was arrested in Dubai in 2019. He is now on trial in the Netherlands on charges of murder and running a huge Amsterdam-based cocaine smuggling group.

The other suspect is a 37-year-old dual Dutch and Moroccan national, whom Dutch media named as Zouhair B..

“One of the Dutch suspects is an extremely big fish,” a Europol source told AFP on condition of anonymity. “He was just as important as Taghi, if not more important.”

 

‘Torture and barbarism’ 

 

Two Belgian-Moroccans in their 40s suspected of amassing “enormous riches” running a Dubai-based network for trafficking cocaine into France were among those arrested, a French judicial source told AFP.

The investigation revealed “barbaric methods, of extreme violence”, with “acts of torture and barbarism” practised by the armed members of the group, the source said.

Three people arrested in France were placed in detention for crimes including kidnapping and torture, after one gang member in Antwerp was tortured after the theft of some drugs.

Spain’s Guardia Civil said a total of 13 people had been arrested in Barcelona, Madrid and Malaga.

The head of the smuggling operation, a British national, fled to Dubai after an attempted arrest in Spain and was continuing to direct operations from there, it said in a statement.

The cocaine was imported from Panama in central America and his supplier, a Panamanian, also lived in Dubai, it said.

Belgian prosecutors said the investigation had already led to raids in Antwerp in August, in which local media said around 900,000 euros had been seized.

 

In drought-hit Iraq, a dam threatens to swallow farmland

By - Nov 27,2022 - Last updated at Nov 27,2022

A bridge spans the Tigris River near the Makhoul Dam site, in northern Iraq's Salaheddine province, on November 1 (AFP photo)

AL-MESSAHAG, Iraq — Jamil Al Juburi, 53, has never left his village in northern Iraq, where his family has worked the land for generations — but a dam will soon swallow his home, forcing them out.

Tens of thousands of Iraqis are threatened by the Makhoul Dam, which the government hopes will be operational on the mighty Tigris in five years.

"I was born here and I grew up here," said Juburi, whose village of Al Messahag is set in pasture land on the banks of the river.

"It's difficult to leave for somewhere else. It is a whole past that we leave behind us."

Once the dam is erected, Juburi's whole region will be under three billion cubic metres of water.

In a country highly vulnerable to climate change,  and buffeted by three consecutive years of drought, authorities have defended the project, which will boost water stores and help prevent shortages.

However, activists decry the impact on more than 30 villages, home to about 118,000 people, and the threats to biodiversity and archaeological sites.

Employed at a state-run oil refinery, Juburi leaves his sons to work the family land, where they plant wheat and citrus trees.

He would agree to move, he said, to put "the national interest above personal interest", on condition that the dam "will serve Iraq" as a whole.

Juburi also demanded "adequate damages" in order to safeguard his and his family's future.

Iraq already has eight dams, but it complains that construction of the facilities upstream, mainly in neighbouring Turkey, has impacted its river volumes.

Plans for the Makhoul facility can be traced back to 2001, in the twilight of dictator Saddam Hussein’s rule.

His downfall in a US-led invasion and chaotic subsequent occupation saw the project shelved for years.

Work finally got underway in 2021, with drilling, soil analysis and a bridge spanning the river.

Riad al-Samarai, deputy governor of Salaheddin province, lists a 250MW hydroelectric power plant and an “irrigation canal that will serve agricultural areas and contribute to the nation’s food security” as among the project’s benefits.

“The public interest requires the construction of this dam to guarantee water reserves for Iraq,” he said.

Five villages are located on the site of the future reservoir, he added, and “a commission has been formed by the provinces and relevant ministries to ensure adequate damages for residents” and to relocate them.

But civil society is up in arms, not only about the human impact.

There are also repercussions for flora and fauna, warn environmental groups Save the Tigris and Humat Dijlah, who say the ancient city of Ashur, a UNESCO world heritage site, is also at risk.

In August, the International Organisation for Migration (IOM) noted that “there has been no official attempt to speak or engage” with local communities.

“Respondents who are farmworkers and landowners saw Makhoul Dam as a severe threat to their livelihoods,” IOM said in a report, sharing the findings of a study by Iraqi organisation Liwan for Culture and Development.

 

Lack of trust 

 

“Nobody has come to see us. Nobody has asked us anything,” said Jamil’s father, Ibrahim Al Juburi, who is in his 80s.

“My ancestors, my father, then I, all stayed in this region,” the farmer said, his body hunched.

Liwan researcher Mehiyar Kathem said the real problem was the “reduction of water that is coming in” from upstream beyond Iraq’s borders.

“Iraq doesn’t need a new dam,” he added. Instead, “the Tigris needs to keep flowing” because of the increase in salinity.

Kathem also pointed to the impact on vulnerable women-led households.

“There is a higher number of women in the area who rely on the agriculture and on the land. We don’t know what is going to happen to female-headed households.”

The study found that 39 villages, each home to between 200 and 8,000 residents, risk being submerged.

According to Liwan, 67 square kilometres of “fertile farmland, estates and orchards” will also disappear if the Makhoul dam reaches full capacity, and more than 61,000 livestock will have to be “sold or relocated”.

“The dam can disrupt the everyday life of some 118,412 individuals,” said Liwan, noting an “absence of trust with decision makers” among the local communities.

Residents “commonly stated that any expression of discontent with Makhoul dam would fall on deaf ears, and their voices would be ignored”, it added.

 

Thousands protest Turkish strikes on Kurdish groups in Syria

By - Nov 27,2022 - Last updated at Nov 27,2022

Syrian-Kurdish demonstrators take to the streets to protest against Turkey’s threats against their region, in the north-eastern Syrian Kurdish-majority city of Qamishli, on Sunday (AFP photo)

QAMISHLI,  Syria — Thousands of Kurds protested on Sunday in the Syrian city of Qamishli against days of deadly Turkish cross-border strikes targeting Kurdish groups in the country’s northeast.

Turkey announced last Sunday it had carried out air strikes against semi-autonomous Kurdish zones in north and northeastern Syria, and across the border in Iraq. It has also threatened a ground offensive in those areas of Syria.

Demonstrators in Kurdish-controlled Qamishli, in Hasakeh province, brandished photos of people killed during recent strikes in the semi-autonomous region, an AFP correspondent said.

“Only the will of the Kurdish people remains,” said protester Siham Sleiman, 49. “It will not be broken and we remain ready. We will not leave our historic land.”

After a three-day lull, Turkish fighter jets heavily bombed Kurdish-controlled areas north of Aleppo early on Sunday, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor.

A separate Turkish drone strike killed five Syrian government soldiers near Tal Rifaat, also north of Aleppo, the observatory added, reporting an exchange of shelling between Kurdish combatants and Turkish forces and their Syrian proxies.

Protesters in Qamishli also chanted in favour of the resistance in “Rojava” — the name Kurds in Syria give to the area they administer.

“The message that we want to convey to the world is that we are victims of eradication,” said Salah El Dine Hamou, 55.

“How long will we continue to die while other countries watch?”

The Turkish strikes come after a November 13 bombing in Istanbul that killed six people and wounded 81. Ankara blamed the attack on the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), which it and its Western allies consider a terrorist group.

The PKK has waged an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984. Turkey alleges that Syrian Kurdish fighters are the PKK’s allies.

Kurdish groups denied any involvement in the Ankara blast.

Some protesters on Sunday carried Kurdish flags alongside photos of PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan — jailed in Turkey since 1999 — and shouted slogans against Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.

The Turkish raids have killed at least 63 Kurdish and allied fighters and Syrian regime soldiers, as well as a Kurdish journalist, according to the observatory, which relies on an extensive network of sources in Syria.

Eight people have been killed in retaliatory artillery fire, three of them across the Turkish border.

Since 2016, Turkey’s military has conducted three offensives mostly targeting Kurdish fighters, and captured territory in northern Syria, which is now held by Ankara-backed proxies.

The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces, the Kurds’ de facto army in the area, led the battle that dislodged Daesh group fighters from the last scraps of their Syrian territory in 2019.

 

Iran's Khamenei says negotiating with US won't end recent 'troubles'

By - Nov 26,2022 - Last updated at Nov 26,2022

TEHRAN — Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei said on Saturday that negotiating with the United States would not put an end to the "troubles" that have rocked the Islamic republic over the past two months.

Iran has seen weeks of demonstrations sparked by the September 16 death in custody of 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman Mahsa Amini. She had been arrested for an alleged breach of the country's strict dress code for women.

Government officials have blamed the "riots" on "foreign enemies" in the West whom they accuse of inciting law-breaking.

"Some tell us in newspapers or on the internet that to put an end to the troubles that started a few weeks ago, all that's needed is to resolve your problem with America and listen to the voice of the nation," Khamenei said.

"Negotiating will not resolve anything," he said, in comments broadcast on state television.

"Our problem with America can only be resolved by letting that country hold us to ransom."

Khamenei said that in order to put an end to hostilities, the US wants Iran to abandon its nuclear programme, change its constitution, restrict its influence to inside its borders, and close its defence industries.

“No Iranian can accept such conditions,” he said.

Khamenei also pointed to “the enormous voice of the nation that rang out” earlier this month during pro-government demonstrations, and for the funeral of Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani, whom the US assassinated in a 2020 drone strike in Baghdad.

“This immense crowd was the voice of the Iranian nation,” he said.

Khamenei made the comments to paramilitaries who visited him as part of celebrations for Basij week.

The Basij is a volunteer militia recruited under the auspices of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, 

“The problem is not a few rioters in the street, even if each rioter, each terrorist, must be punished,” Khamenei told the large assembly.

“The battlefield is much broader. The main enemy is the global arrogance,” he added, using Iran’s catch-all term for the United States and allies including Israel.

President Ebrahim Raisi on Saturday visited a Basij unit in Tehran and told them: “You have performed brilliantly in the fight against the rioters,” Tasnim news agency reported.

Rockets target US Syria base in latest strike — Centcom

By - Nov 26,2022 - Last updated at Nov 26,2022

A photo shows a view of the 'Free Woman' square in the Kurdish majority northern Syrian city of Kobane, on Thursday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Two rockets targeted a US patrol base in northeastern Syria late Friday, the third such attack in nine days, US Central Command said.

Centcom did not indicate who fired the rockets but said, in a statement, that they aimed at "coalition forces at the US patrol base in Al Shaddadi, Syria".

The strike at about 10:30 pm (19:30 GMT) caused no injuries or damage to the base or coalition property, said Centcom, which covers the Middle East region.

The US troops support Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), which are the Kurds' de facto army in the area and led the battle that dislodged the Daesh terror group from the last scraps of their Syrian territory in 2019.

Hundreds of American troops are still in Syria as part of the fight against Daesh remnants.

"Syrian Democratic Forces visited the rocket origin site and found a third unfired rocket," Centcom added in its latest statement.

On November 17 rockets targeted the coalition's Green Village base which is in Syria's largest oil field, Al Omar, near the Iraqi border, Centcom said at the time. There were no injuries.

A war monitor, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights which has a wide network of sources in Syria, said that strike came from "a base of pro-Iranian militias".

Such groups have significant influence in the Syria-Iraq border region.

In another attack, a Turkish drone strike on Tuesday killed two SDF fighters and posed “a risk to US troops”, Centcom told AFP earlier.

That strike hit a base north of Hassakeh city, also in Syria’s northeast but farther north.

On November 20 Turkey announced it had carried out a series of air and drone strikes in Iraq and Syria, a week after a bomb attack in Istanbul that killed six people and wounded 81.

Turkey says it is targeting rear bases of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, designated as a terrorist group by the European Union and the United States, and the Syrian Kurdish People’s Protection Units, which dominate the SDF.

Both Kurdish groups denied responsibility for the Istanbul attack.

The ‘total war’ against Al Shabaab in Somalia

By - Nov 26,2022 - Last updated at Nov 26,2022

NAIROBI — Somalia’s government has declared “all-out war” against the militant group Al Shabaab and adopted a multipronged counterterrorism effort which — despite some early headline-grabbing military gains — promises to be long and difficult.

The dogged Al Qaeda affiliate was driven from Somalia’s major cities a decade ago but retains swathes of countryside, where a coalition of armed groups have joined forces against the insurgents in recent months.

Who is fighting? 

Two clans in drought-afflicted central Somalia, sick of living under Al Shabaab rule, sparked a revolt against the group in July that quickly spread across the regions of Hirshabelle and Galmudug.

In September, the Somali National Army and US-trained “lightning” commandos joined the fray in support of these clan militias, known as “macawisley” after the traditional sarongs worn by their fighters.

“The government wants to seize the current momentum and encourage these types of uprisings across Al Shabaab-held areas in Somalia,” said Omar Mahmood, a researcher at the International Crisis Group think tank.

Though it isn’t clear how many combatants are involved in this broad offensive, the fighting has reached an intensity not seen in some years, with unconfirmed reports of hundreds killed in skirmishes.

Sources in Somalia suggest the fighting could have involved 2,000 to 3,000 “macawisley”. The terrorists are believed to number 5,000 to 8,000 nationwide.

Supported by US drone strikes and artillery and logistics from the African Union Transitional Force, this combined effort has chased Al Shabaab from the strategic provinces of Hiran and Middle Shabelle.

 

What’s the strategy? 

In July, the country’s newly elected president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud outlined his administration’s plan for the Islamists: Hit them militarily, choke off their finances and counter their ideology.

“The previous policies were militaristic policies... attacking, destroying. But Shabaab’s problem is more than a military” one, he said.

As a first step he named Mukhtar Robow — one of Al Shabaab’s founders, who left the movement in 2017 — religious affairs minister to challenge the militant’s violent expression of Islam.

In October, the government threatened to revoke the business licences of traders who paid “taxes” to Al Shabaab and contributed to the millions they raise through extortion.

Somalia’s closest foreign ally the United States announced $10 million for information that disrupted cash flows to Al Shabaab.

Washington recommitted troops to Somalia this year, reversing a decision under former US president Donald Trump.

“The government continues to try and build confidence among the public for them to stand up against the group. We’re yet to measure the success of those declarations,” said Samira Gaid of the Hiraal Institute, a Somalia-based security think tank.

 

Has Al Shabaab responded? 

The militants may have ceded some territory but are playing a long game, said Mahmood.

“Even if they lose in the short term, they will try to find ways to undermine government progress so that they can return.”

The terrorists have returned to some areas abandoned in the face of the offensive, and escalated a campaign of bombing.

On October 29, Somalia witnessed its deadliest attack since 2017, with a double car bombing in the capital Mogadishu leaving 121 dead and 333 injured.

Gaid said the clan uprising was a “huge threat” to Al Shabaab and they were adapting accordingly.

“They are responding heavily to try and push it back and to dissuade other clans to join the fight,” she said.

 

End in sight? 

 

President Mohamud told lawmakers in November that “going back or defeat is not an option”.

But retaking territory is only half the objective.

“The hardest part is holding back that territory” and ensuring people can access services to see the benefit of government rule, he added.

Past gains against the militants have been eroded by bitter clan rivalries, which Al Shabaab exploits to its advantage.

Clan clashes have already been reported in some areas recently liberated from the insurgents.

Mahmood said the government seems keen to expand its operation, but doing so could be fraught.

It’s less clear the clans would unite against Al Shabaab in southern Somalia, where the militants have more influence.

Al Shabaab have resisted military aggression for 15 years and Mohamud himself declared in July “there are strong arguments” for negotiating with the militants.

“But we are not right now in a position to negotiate with Al-Shabaab,” he said. “We will, at the right time. We will negotiate with them.”

Gaid said: “It was always clear to the government that negotiation or reconciliation can only happen when you have an upper hand.”

This offensive “will assist giving the government the upper hand to engage in talks further down” the line.

 

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF