Archive for September 8, 2017

Russia claims killing of IS ‘Minister of War’ in Syria

September 8, 2017

Source:

Russia claims killing of IS ‘Minister of War’ in Syria | The Times of Israel

Gulmurod Khalimov, former US-trained special forces commander from Tajikistan, said fatally wounded in bunker-buster bombardment near Deir Ezzor

Gulmurod Khalimov, Islamic State's 'minister of war,' said killed in Russian airstrike on September 8, 2017 in Deir Ezzor, Syria. (YouTube screenshot)

Gulmurod Khalimov, Islamic State’s ‘minister of war,’ said killed in Russian airstrike on September 8, 2017 in Deir Ezzor, Syria. (YouTube screenshot)

MOSCOW, Russia – Russia claimed Friday to have killed several top commanders of the Islamic State group in an airstrike in Syria, including the “Minister of War” and the so-called Emir of Deir Ezzor.

“As a result of a precision airstrike of the Russian air forces in the vicinity of Deir Ezzor city, a command post, communication center and some 40 IS fighters have been killed,” the Russian defense ministry said in a statement posted on Facebook.

“According to confirmed data, among the killed fighters are four influential field commanders including Deir Ezzor emir Abu Mohammed al-Shimali,” the ministry said.

Gulmurod Khalimov, who is known as the IS group’s Minister of War and the highest-ranking defector from ex-Soviet Tajikistan, suffered a “fatal injury,” it added.

Russia’s SU warplanes dropped “bunker buster” bombs on the fighters as they were meeting near Deir Ezzor to discuss how to respond to the advance of the Syrian army, Moscow said.

Backed by Russia, Syrian troops on Tuesday broke through a years-long siege imposed by IS on tens of thousands of civilians in Deir Ezzor.

Reports of Khalimov’s death have surfaced before.

The Times said in April that Khalimov, described as the highest-ranking IS commander in Mosul, had been killed in an airstrike.

A former colonel, he headed the Tajik interior ministry’s special forces unit and received American training before joining IS in 2015.

Khalimov pledged allegiance to the jihadist group in a video released in May 2015 in a high-profile defection that rocked Tajikistan, a mainly Muslim country.

In the footage he warned that he and other IS recruits based in the Middle East were “coming” for top officials in the country, including long-ruling President Emomali Rakhmon.

In 2016, the United States offered a $3 million bounty for information leading to his location or arrest.

In July, police in Tajikistan killed four relatives of the former special forces colonel in a gun battle, an interior ministry source has said, and three other relatives were detained.

The source claimed that all of those killed or detained were IS “supporters” and said that they were intending to flee to neighboring Afghanistan, but did not offer any proof to back up the claims.

 

New Data: Illegal Voters May Have Decided New Hampshire in 2016

September 8, 2017

New Data: Illegal Voters May Have Decided New Hampshire in 2016, PJ MediaJ. Christian Adams, September 7, 2017

Newly available data is casting doubt on the integrity of the presidential election in New Hampshire in 2016, which Hillary Clinton won by just over 2,700 votes.

Over 6,000 voters in New Hampshire had used same-day voter registration procedures to register and vote simultaneously for president. The current New Hampshire Speaker of the House, Shawn Jasper, sought and obtained data about what happened to these 6,000 “new” New Hampshire voters who showed up on Election Day.

It seems the overwhelming majority of them can no longer be found in New Hampshire.

Of those 6,000, only 1,014 have ever obtained New Hampshire driver’s licenses. Of the 5,526 voters who never obtained a New Hampshire driver’s license, a mere three percent have registered a vehicle in New Hampshire.

The Public Interest Legal Foundation received information that 70 percent of the same-day registrants used out-of-state photo ID to vote in the 2016 presidential election in New Hampshire and to utilize same-day registration.

Gov. Maggie Hassan, a Democrat, also defeated incumbent U.S. Sen. Kelly Ayotte by only 1,017 votes.

These new data illustrate the problem with same-day registration laws: they prevent the ability to verify residency prior to the election — and in a close election, that can make a difference.

As John Fund and Hans von Spakovsky pointed out in their book Who’s Counting, same-day registration fraud won Al Franken his Senate seat, and that extra Democratic seat then gave the country Obamacare.