Tag Archives: security

Six killed in gun-battle in village near Azerbaijan’s capital

NOV. 26 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Two Azerbaijani policemen and four gang members were killed during a gun-battle in a village near Baku when the authorities raided what they described as the stronghold of a group with links to religious extremists.

The fierce battle, which involved machine gun fire and grenades, shocked people living in Baku, triggered warnings from the authorities of a rise in violence linked to extremists and threatened to damage Azerbaijan’s relations with neighbouring Iran.

Although they didn’t explicitly link violence to IS in Syria, the authorities have been increasingly nervous of IS recruitment in Azerbaijan.

In a statement Azerbaijan’s prosecutor-general said that the group, called the Muslim Unity Movement was planning various attacks across Baku and that they had links to Islamic extremists.

“These people and their supporters gathered in Baku and other regions, stocked with various types of weapons, ammunition, explosives,” the prosecutor-general said.

“During the operation, the gang showed armed resistance to police officers and started firing automatic weapons, hand grenades were also thrown.”

The prosecutor-general also said that 14 so called gang members were arrested during the raid in the village of Nardaran.

But neighbouring Iran viewed the incident differently.

The men who were killed were Shia Muslims. Azerbaijan is officially a secular country and the authorities have previously cracked-down on the Shia community, much to the irrita- tion of Iran. The Iranian official media was scathing of the Azerbaijani authorities’explanation.

The Iranian-state owned PressTV described the violence as a crackdown on Azerbaijan’s Shia Muslims.

“The attack came as Shias gathered for a religious ceremony in the village of Nardaran to mark Arabaeen, December 2, the 40th day since the death of Imam Hussein and his followers in a battle of Karbala,” it said. “The reports said violence erupted when security forces attempted to arrest Tale’ Bagirzade, the leader of the MMU, who was delivering a speech on the occasion.”

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 258, published on Nov. 27 2015)

 

 

Armenia’s and Azerbaijan’s presidents to meet on Karabakh

NOV. 24 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev and Armenian president Serzh Sargsyan will meet in Paris on Dec. 1 to discuss their cease-fire over the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, media reported.

The two countries are still officially at war over Nagorno-Karabakh and meetings between the two leaders are rare. Their last meeting was also in Paris in 2014.

Armenian-backed rebels control Nagorno-Karabakh but there are constant skirmishes that kill soldiers almost every week. Over the past few years tension over the region has ebbed and flowed, sometimes threatening to spill over into all-out war.

Earlier this month, the Azerbaijani ministry of defence said that its forces had killed two ethnic Armenian fighters. The Armenian government confirmed this and said that two of its soldiers had been killed by an Azerbaijanji sniper.

At previous meetings between Mr Aliyev and Mr Sargsyan, these normally take place in Paris or Moscow, there have been warm words and friendly photo-ops but no lasting moves to bring about a permanent peace to the region.

Only a 1994 UN-brokered cease- fire maintains a shaky peace. The war killed an estimated 30,000 people and created thousands of refugees.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 258, published on Nov. 27 2015)

IS fighters call for uprising in Georgia

NOV. 23 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – An internet video allegedly produced by the Islamic extremist group IS called on Muslims living in Georgia to overthrow the government and set up a caliphate.

Speaking in Georgian, a group of fighters brandishing Kalashnikovs and wearing Islamic headdress referenced Georgia’s involvement in the US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

“I would like to address the faithless people living in Georgia that have been fighting Islam for a long time. Everybody who has acted against Islam, no matter in Iraq or Afghanistan, will be judged by God’s law,” one of the fighters said.

“You consider yourselves to be very far from Caliphate, thinking we cannot reach Georgia but I would like to remind you of the period when Caliphate was established in Georgia.”

This is the first direct threat made by IS against Georgia.

The Georgian security services have warned that IS has stepped up its recruitment in Georgia, and specifically in the Pankisi Gorge in the north of the country, which is home to Muslim ethnic Chechens.

The day before the IS video surfaced, security forces said they had arrested a 29-year-old Georgian citizen living in the Pankisi Gorge on terrorism related charges. It has also strengthened border checks.

Georgia is an overwhelmingly Orthodox Christian country. It has been an enthusiastic supporter of US action in Iraq and Afghanistan. Georgia wants to join NATO and views its involvement in both wars as an extension of its diplomatic policy by showcasing its loyalty.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 258, published on Nov. 27 2015)

Kyrgyz Imam sentence doubles

NOV. 20 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – A court in Osh, Kyrgyzstan, doubled a jail sentence for Rashod Qori Kamolov, a Muslim Imam, to 10 years after an appeal by a local prosecutor. Kamolov was sentenced earlier this year for inciting religious discord. Kyrgyzstan and other coun- tries in Central Asia are wary of the spread of radical Islam.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 258, published on Nov. 27 2015)

Kyrgyz police arrest IS recruiter at Osh airport

NOV. 18 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Police in Osh said that they had arrested a 19-year-man who was actively recruiting for the IS extremist group based in Syria and Irag.

Governments in Central Asia have been warning, increasingly shrilly it seems, that IS are recruiting more heavily from disaffected young men in Central Asia. IS has claimed responsibility for a series of attacks in Paris last week that killed last least 130 people.

“A young man has been sending recruits from Osh region to participate in wars abroad as part of terrorist organisations in Syria and Iraq with further intention of committing unlawful acts on the territory of Kyrgyzstan,” media quoted the ministry of interior as saying.

“He was also doing the financing, documentation and buying of tickets for recruits to countries of conflict zones.”

Police said that they arrested him at Osh airport as he was helping a recent recruit on his way to Istanbul and then on to Syria. They also said that they had found various fake ID cards, SIM cards and laptops on him.

There has been more than a trickle of recruits from Central Asia heading out to join IS, the most famous being a police chief from Tajikistan, but Western analysts have been disparaging of the image of Central Asia as a major IS recruiting ground.

A more established recruitment area for IS is in Moscow, where an economic downturn has cost Central Asian migrant workers their jobs.

ENDS

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(News report from Issue No. 257, published on Nov. 20 2015)

 

Russia pulls out of Tajikistan base

NOV. 19 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – Media in Tajikistan reported that the Russian military had started to pull out of its base in Kulyab, near the border with Afghanistan, a potentially destabilising move in a fragile border region.

There was no explanation as to why the Russian military would pull out of Kulyab but relations have become increasingly strained with locals.

Russian soldiers have been accused of getting drunk and fighting with locals as well as not paying local workers their full salaries, an accusation the Russian base has refuted.

Still, whatever the underlying reason for the withdrawal, Kulyab is one of three bases that Russia uses in Tajikistan and quitting it will change the dynamics.

Russia has 7,000 soldiers stationed in Tajikistan, its largest deployment outside Russia.

It has warned that Taliban activity in northern Afghanistan could threaten Central Asia and encouraged the region’s governments to strengthen their militaries.

The Kremlin, though, has ruled out taking back responsibility for patrolling Central Asia’s borders.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 257, published on Nov. 20 2015)

 

Georgian lawyer says police beat him

NOV. 9 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – A Georgian lawyer accused police of beating him for several hours after he visited a client at a Tbilisi police station, sparking outrage across Georgia’s social media and jibes of hypocrisy against the authorities.

Police brutality is a sensitive political issue in Georgia. The ruling Georgian Dream coalition has accused the previous administration of Mikheil Saakashvili’s United National Movement of presiding over a regime built around repression and fear.

Giorgi Mdinaradze, the lawyer, said that he had been to hospital with bruises and cuts to his face after the beating.

“They [policemen] put my hands in cuffs and I could not even cover face with hands as they were beating me for five or ten minutes,” media quoted him as saying.

Mr Mdinaradze works for Legal Aid, a government funded group that gives legal advice and support to people who otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford it.

One of the ruling Georgian Dream’s main challenges against the United National Movement party was a case against former defence minister Bacho Akhalaia. He was sent to prison last year for ordering inmates at a prison to be tortured in 2006 when he was the prisons minister.

Police said that they have opened an investigation into the alleged beating of Mr Mdinaradze, the lawyer. On Nov. 13, Georgian media reported that they had arrested a senior policeman in the case.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 256, published on Nov. 13 2015)

LiveJournal comes back to Kazakhstan

NOV. 11 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – The social networking site LiveJournal will be available again in Kazakhstan, the government said. LiveJournal, which is popular in the former Soviet Union, was banned in August 2011 for “propagating terrorism and extremism.” Kazakhstan has been criticised for cracking down on free speech.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 256, published on Nov. 13 2015)

 

Ukraine supports Georgia over SOssetia

NOV. 9 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a show of support for Georgia, Ukraine said it will fine anybody driving a car with a South Ossetian or Abkhazian number plate, media reported. Ukraine is locked in a war with Russia for control of the eastern part of its country. It counts Georgia as a strong ally. S.Ossetia and Abkhazia are Russia- backed Georgian rebel states.

ENDS

Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 256, published on Nov. 13 2015)