France Paying Price of Supporting ISIS: Iranian Commander

Deputy Chief of Staff of the Iranian Armed Forces Brigadier General Massoud Jazayeri condemned recent terrorist attacks in Paris, but at the same time underlined that they were the outcome of the French government’s supports for the ISIL terrorist group.

“If the French government and other Western and regional supporters of Takfiri terrorism had had wisdom and foresight, they would have predicted such a crime in the heart of Europe,” Brigadier General Jazayeri said on Saturday.

From the beginning of spread of terrorist acts in Syria and other regional countries, “we repeatedly warned Europeans that terrorism would plague their countries,” he stated.

“We urged people (in Europe) to pressure their governments into giving up supporting terrorists in the (Middle East) region,” the commander added.

Late on Friday, a string of coordinated attacks in and around the French capital left at least 129 people dead and some 200 others injured.

A state of emergency has been declared in the European country shaken by the horrific attacks.

The West and its regional allies have been blamed for supporting the militants operating inside Syria for more than four years.

According to the United Nations, more than 250,000 people have been killed and one million wounded in the conflicts in Syria.

/257


Leader of ISIS operations in Palmyra killed in Syrian airstrike

Leader of the military operations of the ISIS in Syria’s Palmyra has been killed in an airstrike by the Syrian air force near al-Shaer oilfield in Palmyra suburb in the Syrian central province of Homs, local sources reported.

A civil rights activist confirmed the death of the ISIS senior leader Hajj Hassan Salafi (aka Abu Abd al-Rahman al-Shami) earlier this week in a Syrian airstrike in ad-Duwwa district near al-Shaer oilfield.

“ISIS militants in Palmyra paid farewell to their commander Hajj Hassan Salafi on Wednesday after an airstrike by the Syrian air force,” he said.

“Salafi, who descends from the Bedouin clan of al-Fawaera in Homs, has led the ISIS military operations against Syrian troops in the province of Homs. He has been recently promoted by the terrorist group as leader of Palmyra operations,” the source said on the condition of anonymity.

“Salafi’s death is considered a heavy loss for ISIS, as he was one of the most committed leading members of the group in central Syria, especially that ISIS suffers internal rifts at the moment,” the source added.

/257


France may introduce nationwide curfews

The French interior minister has given the go-ahead to local authorities across the country to impose a curfew in certain areas as part of security measures in the wake of shooting and bomb attacks in Paris, where over 120 people died.

Bernard Cazeneuve said on Saturday that local officials are allowed to introduce the curfews in areas which they deem necessary to prevent attacks similar to the deadly assaults in the capital on Friday.

The French interior minister, who was addressing the nation in televised remarks, said a series of increased security measures would also be introduced across France, including thousands more troops and police and special protection for certain public buildings. He said that demonstrations will be banned at least until Thursday.

French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve (AFP photo)

Cazeneuve did not elaborate where the curfews could be imposed.

French authorities have yet to reveal the identity or the nationality of Paris attackers, who were reportedly killed at the scenes.

Meanwhile, Prime Minister Manuel Valls said Saturday that France will hold a minute’s silence on Monday for the victims of the shootings and explosions on Friday as the nation is observing three days of mourning.

People wait to donate blood at the Hopital Saint Louis in Paris, France, on November 14, 2015, the morning after a string of attacks killed over 120 people in the French capital. (AFP photo) 

Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said measures will be taken to boost protection of France’s official buildings abroad.

French President Francois Hollande said earlier in the day that the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group was behind the attacks. He said the attacks amounted to “an act of war.”

Shortly after the remarks by Hollande, Daesh in a statement claimed responsibility for the assaults.

Out of the roughly 200 people injured in the attacks, 80 individuals are reported to have been in a life-threatening condition.

Night of blood and horror in Paris

A string of coordinated attacks in and around the French capital of Paris has left 127 people dead and some 200 others injured, as a state of emergency is declared in the European country shaken by the horrific attacks.

Assailants struck at least six different venues, ranging from the national sports stadium to a pizzeria, late on Friday.

French President Francois Hollande said later on Saturday that the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group was behind the attacks. He termed the attacks “an act of war.”

Shortly after the remarks by Hollande, Daesh in a statement claimed responsibility for the assaults.

Hollande said 127 people had been killed in the incidents.

Emergency personnel arrive at the Stade de France in Saint Denis, suburban Paris, November 13, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

 

According to reports, out of the roughly 200 people injured in the attacks, 80 individuals are reported to have been seriously injured.

A total of eight assailants were also killed in the attacks, most of them by detonating their explosive belts.

An extra 1,500 soldiers have been mobilized to reinforce police in Paris, Hollande’s office said. Mayor Anne Hidalgo has also urged residents to stay at their homes.

The coordinated assaults came as France, a founding member of the US-led coalition conducting airstrikes against purported Daesh positions in Syria and Iraq, was already on high alert for terrorist attacks ahead of a global climate conference due to open later this month

Police cordon off a street following several attacks in and around the French capital, Paris, November 13, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

 

Hollande, meanwhile, cancelled his visit to the summit of the Group of Twenty (G20) international forum in Turkey and will be represented there by Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius and Finance Minister Michel Sapin.

Emergency declared, borders closed

Soon after the attacks, the French president declared a state of emergency in a bid to contain the security situation in the country.

“As I speak, terrorist attacks of unprecedented proportions are underway in the Paris area. There are dozens killed, there are many injured. It is a horror.”

He also said France’s borders have been ordered shut following the attacks.

“We must ensure that no one comes in to commit any act whatsoever, and at the same time make sure that those who have committed these crimes should be arrested if they try to leave the country,” the French president said in a brief televised statement.

French President Francois Hollande (C), surrounded by bodyguards, arrives at the scene of an attack in Paris, November 13, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

 

Meanwhile, condemnations and expressions of sympathy are pouring in for the French government and people.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has sent a message to his French counterpart, condemning the attacks.

“In the name of the Iranian nation, itself a victim of the evil scourge of terrorism, I strongly condemn these inhumane crimes and condole with the bereaved French nation and government,” President Rouhani said in his message.

Other countries, including the United States, Russia, Britain, Germany, Spain, India, Australia, and Turkey, as well as the European Union (EU) have voiced their condemnation of the attacks.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has also condemned the attacks in the French capital.

The United Nations (UN)’s Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has also condemned the attacks. So has the Vatican.

A number of countries, including China, have also said they are ready to work with France to combat terrorism.

Saudi Arabia, whose preachers officially preach Wahhabism, an extremely intolerant and violent ideology, has also said the Paris attacks show it is necessary to eradicate “threats to global security” through joint international efforts.

In the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks in the US, 15 assailants out of the total 19 were Saudi nationals.

Paris in the crosshairs

The French capital had been targeted in another series of terrorist attacks as recently as January 7, when gunmen attacked the Paris offices of French magazine Charlie Hebdo, killing 12 people and wounding 11 others.

The incident was followed by a series of sieges and shootings across Paris, resulting in the killing of more people and an extensive sense of insecurity in the country.

In a posthumous video released a few days later, Amedy Coulibaly, a gunman who killed four hostages in another terror attack at a Paris supermarket before he was slain by police, claimed he was acting on behalf of the Daesh Takfiri group in coordination with the two brothers who attacked Charlie Hebdooffices. He said the two brothers, Said and Cherif Kouachi, were affiliated with the al-Qaeda terrorist group.

Assad compares Paris terror to plight of Syria

7c1cc51b-f63d-4928-9251-ead4bcc1afbd

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has condemned the string of coordinated terrorist attacks that killed at least 127 people in and around the French capital of Paris.

“What France suffered from – savage terror – is what the Syrian people have been enduring for over five years,” he said on Saturday, hours after the attacks in France.

The attacks in France were carried out late on Friday, when assailants struck at least six different venues in and around the French capital.

President Assad added in a meeting with a delegation of French lawmakers in the Syrian capital of Damascus that “mistaken policies” adopted by Paris have contributed to the “spread of terrorism” that led to the latest terror attacks in the European country.

Foreign-backed militants in Syria (File photo)

 

The Syrian leader further said that Paris terrorist attacks cannot be separated from the bombings that took place in the Lebanese capital of Beirut on Thursday and from what Syria has been enduring for the past five years.

On Thursday, a twin blasts claimed by Daesh Takfiri terrorists took 44 lives in the southern suburbs of Beirut.

The Syrian president said that he had warned “what would happen in Europe for the past three years” if its leaders continued with their policies but his warnings were not heeded.

“We said, don’t take what is happening in Syria lightly. Unfortunately, European officials did not listen.”

He also urged French President Francois Hollande to change his policy. “The question that is being asked throughout France today is, was France’s policy over the past five years the right one? The answer is no.”

Rescuers evacuate an injured person on Boulevard des Filles du Calvaire, close to the Bataclan concert hall in central Paris, early on November 14, 2015. (Photo by AFP)

 

Since March 2011, Syria has been beset by foreign-backed militancy, which has so far claimed the lives of over 250,000 people and displaced millions of others.

The militancy in the Arab country has intensified due to the activities of militants groups, including Daesh which has overrun about a third of Syria, where it is tyrannizing the civilian population.

France is among the Western countries that have been supporting the militants fighting against the Syrian government. As part of a US-led coalition, the country has also been conducting air raids against what it alleges to be Daesh positions in the violence-scarred Arab country.

President Assad complained back in May that the so-called coalition against Daesh does not aim to “do away” with the terror group, adding, “They want to use this terrorist structure for threatening and blackmailing other countries.”

Also on Saturday, Daesh released an undated video, threatening to attack France as long as the aerial campaign continued.

“As long as you keep bombing you will not live in peace. You will even fear traveling to the market,” said a Daesh member in the footage.

Wahhabism is the enemy lurking in the shadows not Islam

Late on Friday the French capital was hit by a series of terror attacks. As a result France declared a state of emergency, its security services scrambling to understand how their country and their people became murderous radicals’ target.

An estimated 120 were killed this Friday – a tragedy which millions around the world are already mourning.

And so they should, any loss of life to violence is a tragedy and an injustice against humanity as a whole.

But as anger will certainly rise in people’s heart let us remember to direct such ire towards those who are indeed guilty.Let’s not allow racism, bigotry and intolerance dictate our actions.

If ISIS came to claim responsibility for Paris attack, the crimes of this one terror organization should not fall on Islam and its people.

Radicals might call themselves Muslims it does not make it so. Radicals might call themselves righteous, it does not make it so.

Those Wahhabi hordes, those men who espoused the violence, deviant and fascist ideology of Wahhabism positioned themselves outside the realm of Islam when they purposely rejected its tenets of peace, compassion and moderation for bloodletting.

In his forthcoming book Restoring The Balance, Dr John Andrew Morrow, a prominent scholar of Islam writes: “Islam, it should be recalled, is a religion of moderation. Muslims should be neither extremely lax nor extremely strict in their observances. As we read in the Holy Qur’an, “Allah burdens not a person beyond his scope” (2:286); “[Allah] has not laid upon you in religion any hardship” (22: 78); and “Allah does not want to place you in difficulty” (5: 6). As Almighty Allah warns in the Holy Qur’an, “Do not exaggerate in your religion” (4:171), a verse that can also be translated as “Do not be fanatical in your faith.” The Qur’an also warns believers to “Beware of extremism in your religion” (5:77). In short, Muslims are supposed to be “a justly balanced nation” (2:143).

Although some scholars may argue that the reproach against extremism contained in the Qur’an applies to the People of Book, the Prophet explained that it was equally applicable to Muslims. In fact, he warned his followers to “Beware of extremism in your religion for it is that which destroyed the nations which came before you” (Nasai and Ibn Majah). In another tradition, he stated that “The religious extremists [mutanatti‘un] are destroyed” (Muslim). And again, “Let it be known, the religious extremists [mutanatti‘un] are destroyed” (Abu Dawud). The Messenger of Allah also warned: “There are two groups of people from my Ummah who will not receive my intercession: oppressive rulers, and religious extremists” (Tabarani).”

Extremism and radicalism, whatever their forms and purposes are by definition anti-Islamic as they negate God’s commands to mankind, that Islam is the religion of the middle – that piety and Grace are found by subduing passion and excess.

Paris attack was commandeered and carried out by the enemies of Islam and Islam can never be found in those murderous cries radicals insist on screaming as they kill and plunder, sowing destruction as they go, striking fear at the heart of every man, woman and child.

If Almighty Allah and the Prophet denounced all forms of religious extremism, so did the Twelve Imams. As Imam ‘Ali warned, “Two types of people will be destroyed because of me: the extremist and the enemy.” He stated that “The best stance towards me belongs to those who choose a moderate way.” Imam Muhammad al-Baqir professed that “There are two categories of my Ummah which do not benefit from Islam: the extremists and those who believe in predestination.” As Imam Ja‘far al-Sadiq warned, “Beware of the exaggerators lest they deviate your children.” He stated that “The smallest thing that diverts a believer from his faith is sitting next to an extremist, listening to him, and confirming his words.” As Imam ‘Ali al-Rida said, “We, the Household of Muhammad, are the middle nation. The extremists cannot reach us, and the laggard cannot keep up with us.”

Wahhabism is a cancer onto the world which needs to be eradicated. Muslims more than most have suffered under its banner. And so when you look at terror do not see Islam but see Wahhabism, the very ideology western powers insist on rubbing shoulders with when they bow to Riyadh’s will.

Islam, real Islam, the Islam which our prophets and our Imams so bravely and brilliantly taught to their communities is not the faith now practiced in Riyadh.

Wahhabism is the enemy lurking in the shadows not Islam.

/149


Photos: ISIS attacks several areas in Paris

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Paris attack same as plight of Syria

President Bashar al-Assad received on Saturday a French delegation, including a number of parliamentarians, intellectuals, and media men, headed by member of the French National Assembly Thierry Mariani.

President al-Assad affirmed that the terrorist attacks which targeted Paris couldn’t be separated from those that took place in Beirut, and what has been happening in Syria since 5 years and in other regions, adding “terrorism is one field in the world and terrorist organizations don’t recognize borders.”

“Wrong polices adopted by western states, particularly France, towards events in the region, and its ignorance of the support of a number of its allies to terrorists are reasons behind the expansion of terrorism,” President al-Assad said, pointing out to the importance of adopting new polices and taking active procedures to stop support for terrorists logistically or politically in order to overcome terrorism.

For their part, members of the visiting delegation underlined that the terrorist attacks in France yesterday proved that there is no state which would be safe from terrorism, expressing belief in the importance of unifying efforts of regional and international sides to combat it and stop this phenomenon which poses threat to the peoples of the region and world.

They showed sympathy with the suffering of the Syrian people who are subjected to a fierce terrorist war, affirming their determination to convey what they have really seen during their visit to Syria in a way that could form a French public opinion, based on realities, not on fabricated images.

/257


500 Kyrgyz fighting for ISIS in Syria

Authorities in Kyrgyzstan say hundreds of nationals from the Central Asian country have joined the ranks of extremist militant groups operating in Syria.

Speaking at a press conference in the capital, Bishkek, on Friday, Kyrgyz Defense Council Secretary Temir Dzhumakadyrov said about 500 Kyrgyz citizens are currently fighting for militants in Syria.

He added that security forces have managed to detain 50 people who either fought in Syria for extremist groups or were planning to travel there to join such groups.

Rahim Salimov, the head of the 10th Main Department at Kyrgyzstan’s Interior Ministry, announced in early September that 45 Kyrgyz citizens have been killed in Iraq and neighboring Syria while fighting for Daesh Takfiris.

According to an October 2014 report by the United Nations (UN) Security Council, 15,000 foreigners have flocked to Syria and Iraq to fight alongside Daesh extremists or other foreign-sponsored terrorist groups.

Daesh militants control some parts of Iraq and Syria. The terrorists have been carrying out horrific acts of violence, including public decapitations, against all Iraqi and Syrian communities such as Shias, Sunnis, Kurds and Christians.

The Syrian conflict, which started in March 2011, has claimed the lives of more than 250,000 people and left over one million injured, according to the UN.

/257