Archive for August 13, 2014

Has ISIS reached the Gaza Strip?

August 13, 2014

By: Anav Silverman, Tazpit News Agency

Published: August 13th, 2014

via The Jewish Press » » Has ISIS reached the Gaza Strip?.

 

“I would rather die than accept Israeli blood.” A Gazan terrorist wrapped in an ISIS flag at his funeral.
 

According to a recent Gatestone Institute publication, the presence of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has begun to grow in the Gaza Strip, with both the PA and Israel convinced that followers of ISIS in Gaza have been responsible for some of the rocket attacks on Israel.

Last month, the Israel Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center reported that Salafist-jihadi operatives in the Gaza Strip uploaded a video clip to YouTube on July 8, documenting several instances of rockets being launched at Israel. The video clip, entitled “The Salafist-jihadi [movement[ in the Gaza Strip – lovers of the Islamic state [i.e. ISIS] launches rockets at the Jews.” The video showed at least 10 rockets being launched at Israel.

In addition, the Egyptian newspaper Al-Masry Al-Youm reported in late June that Egyptian security forces arrested 15 ISIS terrorists (known as ‘Daash’ in Arabic) who tried to infiltrate Sinai from the Gaza Strip. According to the report, the 15 who were arrested were instructed to begin the formation of an ISIS branch in Egypt among terrorist groups in the Sinai.

However, the Hamas Interior Ministry refuted the report, with Maan News Agency reporting that the ministry stated it was a lie and that “all tunnels between Gaza and Egypt have been closed completely after the Egyptian army destroyed them.” Iyad Al Bezem, a Hamas interior spokesman, stated that “there is no presence of the ISIS in the Gaza Strip.”

Hamas has dealt with expressions of ISIS support in the Strip strongly. Gatestone reports that ISIS followers organized a rally on June 12 to celebrate the military victories of the ISIS in Iraq, with Hamas policemen dispersing the Rafah rally in response. In addition, Hamas prevented local journalists from reporting the event “as part of its attempt to deny the existence of ISIS in the Gaza Strip.”

At the rally, dozens of Islamists were reported chanting, “Khaybar, Khaybar, Ya Yahud, Jaish Mohamed Saya’ud!” (O Jews, Mohamed’s army will return) in reference to the story of the 629 CE battle by the Prophet Mohamed against the Jews of Khaybar in northwestern Arabia, where many Jews were killed and Jewish women and children taken as slaves.

Additionally, at a funeral for two terrorists that Israel killed for firing rockets at Israeli communities, on Sunday, June 29, the black ISIS flags were seen flying, and the terrorists’ coffins were reportedly draped in ISIS flags according to a World Net Daily report.

The radical jihadi ISIS, which recently changed its name to The Islamic State, proclaimed itself an Islamic caliphate on June 29, claiming religious authority over all Muslims in the world, and having ushered in “a new era of international jihad.” The group has exterminated at least 500 people of Iraq’s Yazidi Kurdish ethnic minority, while burying some of its victims alive. Some 300 Yazidi women were kidnapped as slaves and around 150,000 Yazidi Kurds, who have been entrapped by ISIS on Iraq’s Sinjar mountains, are currently homeless and starving.

Vatican Advocates Military Action In Iraq

August 13, 2014

Vatican Advocates Military Action In Iraq
by JOHN ROSSOMANDO 12 Aug 2014, 12:56 PM PDT via Breibart dot Com


(This is a first for me. Never seen the Vatican take such a strong position. Looks like the Pope has a bigger pair than Obama. I pray his plea doesn’t fall on deaf ears. Are there any other countries listening or, as Christians, must we turn the other cheek? -LS)

Military intervention in Iraq may be the only way to stop the genocide against the country’s Christian minority by the Islamic State (formerly the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS), a senior Vatican diplomat says.

“At this moment, we hope the voice that is surging from different Christian and religious communities, from moderate Muslims, from people of good will around the world, may find the response of concrete humanitarian assistance that is provided for the Christians in northern Iraq as well as some political and even effective military protection,” Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican’s permanent observer to the United Nations told Vatican Radio.

This marks the first time a Vatican official has supported military action of any kind in recent memory. Pope John Paul II condemned the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

At least 100,000 Christians have fled their villages in the Nineveh plains of northern Iraq, according to Iraq’s Chaldean Catholic Patriarch Louis Sako. Last month, the Islamic State ordered Christians living in Mosul to pay the jizyah tax mandated by the Quran, convert to Islam, or face death.

Sako called the Islamic State’s onslaught a “Way of the Cross” for Iraq’s Christians who have been in the region since the beginnings of Christianity. They have been forced to flee on foot amid Iraq’s summer heat.

“They are using the sword to cut off hand[s] and also beheading other[s] so I don’t think this is the behavior of human beings, but wild animals do that,” an Iraqi Christian refugee told CBN News.

Islamic State terrorists have looted the Christians’ possessions – everything from dentures to wedding rings – leaving them destitute. Churches have been burned or converted into mosques. Ancient Christian manuscripts also have been burned, and Christian symbols have been desecrated.

“They are killing our people in the name of Allah and telling people that anyone who kills a Christian will go straight to heaven,” Archbishop Toma Dawod of the Syrian Orthodox Church told U.K.’s The Guardian newspaper following the fall of Qaraqosh, which had been Iraq’s largest Christian city, to the Islamic State.

Archbishop Tomasi also complained that a “certain indifference” to Christian suffering in Iraq existed in the international community.

“It is difficult to convince—because of false modesty, I would say—the Western powers to take a strong stance in defense of the Christians,” Tomasi said.

This stance was echoed by Sako, who complained that President Obama’s decision to bomb Islamic State artillery positions near the Kurdish region was inadequate and that humanitarian aid alone was insufficient.

“The position of the American President Obama to only give military assistance to protect Erbil is disappointing,” Sako wrote. “The Americans are not up to a rapid solution to give hope specifically as they are not going to attack ISIS in Mosul and in the Nineveh plain.
“There is no strategy to dry up the sources of manpower and the resources of these Islamic terrorists.”

Senators want UNRWA investigated over ‘troubling’ Gaza role

August 13, 2014

Senators want UNRWA investigated over ‘troubling’ Gaza role

By MICHAEL WILNER08/13/2014 00:56

Lawmakers concerned by rockets “turned over to local authorities;” UN sending munitions experts in search of more weapons caches;

Situation “exceptionally difficult,” says State Department.

via Senators want UNRWA investigated over ‘troubling’ Gaza role | JPost | Israel News.

 

UNRWA school damaged by fighting in Gaza Photo: REUTERS
 

WASHINGTON — Members of the United States Senate are demanding an independent investigation into the role of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency during Israel’s most recent war in Gaza with Hamas.

Accusing UNRWA of maintaining active and extensive ties with Hamas— and of supporting its activities throughout the month-long war— Senate Foreign Relations Committee members Mark Kirk (R-Ill.), Ben Cardin (D-Md.) and Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) wrote a letter this week to US Secretary of State John Kerry accusing the UN agency of bias and its role in the conflict troubling. UNRWA, an ostensibly neutral agency tasked with administering aid to Palestinian refugees throughout the region, adopted a political role in the heat of the conflict, during which at least four of its facilities were badly damaged and many of their inhabitants killed.

During the deadliest days of the war, UNRWA officials went on record accusing the Israeli government of violating international humanitarian law. UNRWA also publicly declared the discovery of three caches of rockets stored in Gaza schools during the July battle. The organization did not identify a responsible party for the crime, however, noting that the schools used as weapons depots were “mothballed” for the summer months.

Media reports quickly surfaced suggesting UNRWA returned the recovered rockets to Hamas, but those claims were never independently unverified.

“UNRWA claimed to have turned over to the ‘local authorities’ or have gone missing,” the Senate letter reads. “We fear that this means these rockets may have found their way back into Hamas’ hands.” The senators note that the US government is the single largest donor to UNRWA, providing the agency with $294 million in 2013 and a total of $5 billion since 1950.

While the letter does not call on the State Department to cut aid, they say the American taxpayers “deserve to know if UNRWA is fulfilling its mission or taking sides in this tragic conflict.” The United States and European Union list Hamas as a terrorist organization, and the United Nations has called on the group to renounce violence, recognize Israel, and respect previous agreements between the Palestinian Authority and the Jewish state.

Responding to the letter, a State Department spokesman said that the UN is taking “proactive steps to address this problem,” including deploying munitions experts to the strip in search of more weapons caches.

“The international community cannot accept a situation where the United Nations– its facilities, staff and those it is protecting– are used as shields for militants and terrorist groups,” State Department spokesman Edgar Vasquez told The Jerusalem Post. “We remain in intensive consultations with UN leadership about the UN’s response.”

Hamas’ use of UN facilities as “shields” for its fighters and its weapons posed one of the most politically vexing challenges of the war. UN secretary-general Ban Ki-moon said that such crimes turned UN facilities into legitimate military targets, inviting Israeli strikes; but in a strongly-worded statement from the State Department, after an Israeli shelling killed UNRWA refugees in Gaza for a third time, the US said “the suspicion that militants are operating nearby does not justify strikes that put at risk the lives of so many innocent civilians.”

The Israeli army fiercely denies that it targets civilians, arguing that its use of leaflets, phone calls, text messages and “knocks on the roof” warning of impending strikes are indicative of its efforts to avoid civilian casualties.

“There are few good solutions given the exceptionally difficult situation in Gaza,” Vasquez continued, “but nonetheless we are in contact with the United Nations, other UNRWA donors and concerned parties— including Israel— on identifying better options for protecting the neutrality of UN facilities and ensuring that weapons discovered are handled appropriately and do not find their way back to Hamas or other terrorist groups.” Kirk, one of the signatories of the letter, said that UNRWA has had “ties to terrorism” in the past, and that, in September 2012, Hamas–affiliated candidates won 25 out of 27 seats on UNRWA’s workers union board.

“I am demanding a credible and independent assessment of UNRWA’s actions during this crisis,” Kirk said in a statement. “US taxpayers deserve immediate answers and full transparency regarding their intentions and actions.” Cardin was the sole Democrat among the three behind the letter.

“When leaders and organizations of the United Nations blur the clear distinction between a nation-state defending itself and a terrorist organization attempting to murder civilians, Americans take note,” Cardin said. “When an organization funded in part by the US suggests that the two are morally equivalent, US taxpayers take note.”