Iranian Parliament okays exchange of prisoners with Belgium

August 3, 2022 – 21:20 – Tehran Times –

TEHRAN — The Iranian parliament on Wednesday voted in favor of a draft treaty that would allow exchange of convicts between Iran and Belgium.
195 MPs voted in favor of the draft, 2 against, and 7 abstained.
A clause of the ratification says the bill is “approved and permission to exchange its documents is given.”
The clause says the bill consists of an introduction and twenty-two articles described in the attachment.
On July 21, out of the 131 Belgian MPs present in the parliament, 79 voted in favor of a bill that would allow the exchange of convicts between the two countries, while 41 rejected the treaty, and 11 abstained, Politico reported.
The treaty ratified in the Belgian parliament also allows each party to grant amnesty.
The deal may clear the way for the release of Assadollah Assadi, an Iranian diplomat who was wrongfully convicted in Belgian courts and sentenced to 20 years in prison.
The accord may also open the path for a future political agreement with other Europeans imprisoned in Iran.
The pact has been criticized in the United States.
The chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Bob Menendez, advised Belgium not to give Assadi immunity.
In this regard, Iran’s Judiciary spokesman Masoud Setayeshi said discussions over the exchange of Assadi with a Belgian citizen are not true.
“Mr. Assadollah Assadi is one of the diplomats of the Islamic Republic of Iran, who enjoyed diplomatic immunity according to international law. He was illegally arrested in Germany and was transferred to Belgium based on an illegal order in 2018, and the Belgian court held a completely flawed and non-compliant court, sentencing him to 20 years in prison,” the judiciary spokesman stated.
“We demand Assadi’s unconditional extradition,” he said, adding Iran’s demand is made regardless of the bill ratified in the Belgian parliament.

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Azerbaijan provides lump-sum payments to over 11,000 first Karabakh war veterans

03 Aug 2022 13:08 – 
News.az

More than 11,000 veterans of the first Karabakh war have been provided with lump-sum payments, Azerbaijani Minister of Labor and Social Protection of the Population Sahil Babayev said on Wednesday, News.Az reports.
He noted that the mechanism for providing one-time payments to those disabled in the first Karabakh war was developed on the basis of humanism wider coverage of the social security program.
According to the minister, one-time payments are provided not only to those who currently have the status of a disabled person of the first Karabakh War, but also to those who subsequently recovered, underwent rehabilitation and currently don’t have a degree of disability.
At the same time, in case of the death of the disabled person of the first Karabakh war, the lump-sum payments will be provided to their heirs, Babayev added.

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“Clever diplomat with poker face”: Saif al-Adel likely al-Qaeda chief after ZawahiriSEXI News

02/08/2022
SexInNews.com – click here

 
Saif al-Adel is most wanted in connection with the August 7, 1998 bombings of the US embassies in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania and Nairobi, Kenya.

With a $10,000,000 bounty on his head, Saif al-Adel is seen as the next successor to the tainted terrorist group al-Qaeda following the death of its leader Ayman Zawahiri. Adel has been an ardent follower of the radical thinker Muhammad Abd al-Salaam Faraj, who originally founded the Egyptian Islamic Jihad (EIJ).
Adele himself was part of the EIJ along with his former chief and Al Qaeda chief Zawahiri. Adele and Zawahiri were both long part of the EIJ along with Osama bin Laden, and have reportedly fought the Russians together in Afghanistan. The United States Federal Bureau of Investigation has stated that of her many crimes, Adele is most wanted in connection with the August 7, 1998 bombings of the United States embassies in Dar es Salaam in Tanzania and Nairobi in Kenya.

However, the search for Adele began in 1993 when she allegedly led and led the infamous ambush known as Black Hawk Down, where the US military and their helicopters were targeted to kill 18 soldiers.

He is reportedly 60 to 65 years old according to the series of birth dates suggested by the FBI. Both Zawahiri and Adele have served the Egyptian government for a long time. While the former was a surgeon, the latter was an army officer.
Adel was also one of the names that would replace the al-Qaeda chief after bin Laden was killed in 2011. However, Zawahiri was chosen being senior to him. Even when bin Laden was alive, he was considered the third most important person after Zawahiri and bin Laden.
Research into Adele by the Counter Terrorism Center has suggested that since her identity is largely unknown, it is impossible to say anything about her family or childhood.
“There is some indication that he did not have a traditional Islamic education, or if he did it was not very widespread; in his 2005 memoir about Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, Saif writes that he was partly able to memorize the Qur’an. are making the most of their free time, a task to which primary Islamic education is almost exclusively devoted,” the paper states.
The Egyptian military officer, Adele was reportedly arrested in Cairo in 1987 as part of a national security case. At this time, he was ranked as a colonel in the Egyptian Special Forces. He was convicted of reviving the terrorist organization (Tanjim al-Jihad), responsible for the assassination of Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, and of killing former Egyptian Interior Minister Hassan al-Basha and journalist Makram Muhammad Ahmed. was trying. In addition, he was also accused of planning an attack on the Egyptian parliament and army.
“I found that the brothers of the al-Jihad movement and the Islamic group lacked the practical experience that would enable them to achieve the desired change. [of society], In my opinion and in the opinion of some of the brothers, it was due to over-zealousness which at times resulted in haste or carelessness,” wrote Saif in his memoir.
He has shown active participation in the fighting again of the federal government of Somalia and the African Mission in Somalia. Not only this, they have footprints in Yemen as well as Iran. Even the Australian Bureau of Investigation has cases where it planned to assassinate Australian mining magnate Joseph Gutnick. The researchers note that in al-Qaeda circles, Adel is so respected not only among soldiers but also among leaders that when al-Zawahiri receives allegiance (bayat) from members of the organization’s governing council before officially taking office. vows required, so it was Adele who did it for him.
The Counter Terrorism Center writes of him as one of the most experienced professional soldiers in the worldwide jihadist movement.
“There are war marks on his body: a wound from a bursting light shell under his right eye; a mark on his right hand; An arm injury from his time fighting the United States and its allies in Somalia. But he is no ordinary-minded thug (but) a “clever diplomat” with a poker face.

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20 Years Later: Palestinian Authority Still Handing Out Salary Raises to Terrorists in ‘Pay to Slay’ Policy

08-02-2022

Chris Mitchell 
CBN News.com

20 Years Later: Palestinian Authority Still Handing Out Salary Raises to Terrorists in ‘Pay to Slay’ Policy

JERUSALEM – Twenty years ago, a suicide bomber killed nine people and wounded dozens of others in an attack at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
The accomplices in that attack just got a pay raise.
The bombing which took place at the Frank Sinatra Cafeteria at Hebrew University on July 31, 2002, came in the middle of what was called the Second Intifadah, a four-year-long terror campaign against Israelis. The Israel Defense Forces arrested those responsible who have been in prison for 20 years.
“Here we’re talking about nine murdered, over 80 injured. Five of those murdered were actually American citizens. And now the Palestinian Authority (P.A.) is literally paying additional rewards to those terrorists,” noted Palestinian Media Watch’s Maurice Hirsch.
Hirsch explained to CBN News the Palestinian Authority law which standardizes payments to terrorists.
“And sets a pay scale which goes up, when the salary goes up every period of time on an automatic basis,” he said. “So one of those increments goes up when you serve 20  years in jail, you then get a 14 and a bit percent pay rise and your salary goes up.”
Israel also passed its own anti-terror law in 2018 that reduces the amount of tax revenue they return to the P.A. That’s equal to the money the Palestinian Authority pays terrorists in jail.
Just days ago, they stopped payment of more than $176 million to the P.A., but the process of paying money to terrorists, known as “pay to slay,” is deeply embedded in the Palestinian Authority.
“I cannot impress on you how deeply suited and rooted this entire policy is,” Hirsch told CBN News. “As Mahmoud Abbas has repeated said, ‘If there’s only one penny left in the coffers of the Palestinian Authority, he will pay it to terrorists.’”
Four years ago, the U.S. Congress passed the Taylor Force Act to stop U.S. aid to the Palestinians from going to pay terrorists.
“The Palestinian Authority just don’t care,” Hirsch explained. “While they constantly say that America is failing them by not providing aid, really all they need to do is stop paying terrorists. Stop rewarding the murder of American citizens and they’ll be able to get their money.”
Hirsch said the world needs to wake up to how the P.A. keeps alive this perpetuation of terrorism.
“Probably the most poisonous idea affecting peace between Israelis and the Palestinians at the moment is the payment of these rewards to terrorists,” he noted. “The international community must get together, must implore the Palestinian Authority to abolish this policy and condition all aid to the P.A. on abolishing this policy.”
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The PA is gradually being cornered by Palestinian society

August 2, 2022 at 5:37 pm | Published in: BlogBlogs – PoliticsIsraelMiddle EastOpinionPalestine

 
Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas in the West Bank, 25 May 2021 [ALEX BRANDON/POOL/AFP/Getty Images]

Ramona Wadi
 walzerscent

August 2, 2022 at 5:37 pm

Palestinian Authority leader, Mahmoud Abbas, does not tolerate any political thought that is divergent from his brand of corruption. While the murder of Palestinian activist, Nizar Banat, last year by the PA’s security services was marked with prominence, the PA has persisted in persecuting Palestinian activists, university students and journalists, under the pretext of safety for Palestinian civilians. Abbas has, perhaps, conveniently wiped out the memory of Palestinians being beaten for protesting against his rule and the security services’ murder of Banat. The only safety Abbas wants concerns his rule. It could be said that possibly the PA is funded only to exist as a buffer zone between Palestinian civilians and Israel’s colonial expansion and violence, for Israel’s benefit, of course.
In 2021, Lawyers for Justice recorded more than 340 arrests made by the PA. Between May and November last year, more than 200 Palestinians were arrested, based upon their political opinions.
In June this year, Israeli media reported that 14 security services officers on trial for Banat’s murder have been released on bail, ostensibly due to the risk of a coronavirus spread in prison. The selective release, of course, fools nobody. Releasing officers who are clearly a threat to Palestinian civilians is of no concern to the PA, but rather a necessity.
Last month, the PA security services embarked on another raid targeting Palestinian students, activists and journalists. According to Muhannad Karajeh from Lawyers for Justice, the latest PA raid which led to the arrest of 94 civilians was one of the biggest since 2012. Most Palestinians detained were affiliated to Palestinian political factions critical of the PA, notably Hamas, the Palestinian Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine. A majority were also former prisoners in Israeli jails, which is a reminder of how the PA and Israel often collaborate when it comes to detaining Palestinians. According to the spokesman for the Palestinian security services Talal Dweikat, Abbas’s orders were given based “on the importance of exerting all the pressure possible to address all manifestations of chaos and disorder in the Palestinian street.”
READ: Fatah official criticises 2021 decision to cancel parliamentary election
Combating protests with violence will only increase protests against Abbas’s rule. With Banat’s murder, the PA has shown exactly how far it will go to counter the most formidable threats to its illegitimate rule. The latter has been a subject of a recent protest by the Palestinian Bar Association, which is speaking out against Abbas’s ruling through decrees which the Palestinian Constitution only allows as a necessity.
And while Abbas may be more concerned about challenges posed by activists, society is increasingly revolting against the PA. Yesterday, the Palestinian Engineers Syndicate also staged a protest in front of the PA’s Prime Minister Mohammad Shtayyeh’s headquarters demanding financial rights and the implementation of signed financial agreements.
With discontent rife among all sectors of Palestinian society, the meagre concessions Abbas managed to negotiate with Israeli Defence Minister, Benny Gantz, will provide no buffer zone for the conditions Abbas and Israel have created. While the arrests certainly depict the brute force of the PA’s security services, the increase in protests testifies to the fact that soon, possibly, Palestinians will unleash a united front against decades of PA donor-funded corruption.
The views expressed in this article belong to the author and do not necessarily reflect the editorial policy of Middle East Monitor.

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Israel Opens Ramon Airport to Palestinian Authority Travelers

By
Hana Levi Julian
 –

6 Av 5782 – August 2, 2022

 

Photo Credit: Moshe Shai / Flash 90
Ramon Airport, near Eilat.

 

 

Israeli Civil Administration officials have agreed to allow Palestinian Authority citizens to travel through Ramon Airport near Eilat after a meeting with the head of the Al-Amir Group travel agency, according to Mohammad al-Kassim, writing for The Media Line.
Amir Assi was quoted by The Media Line as saying Israeli officials gave a green light to advertise the pilot program at a meeting on Monday.
Ramon Airport opened in January 2019.
The pilot program is aimed at residents of Bethlehem and Hebron, in Judea, because the distance to southern Israel is shorter from that section of the Palestinian Authority.
Booking will be carried out by Palestinian Authority tour operators.
An initial charter flight, to be comprised solely of Palestinian Authority passengers, is scheduled to depart Ramon Airport for a trip to Antalya, Turkey on Sunday, August 21.
To address the relevant security concerns, Assi said, “Travelers are asked to take with them small pieces of luggage” to speed up the process. He added the passengers can “return with large suitcases.”

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Deadlock gives Iraq record run without government, hampering reforms

Reuters – By 

BAGHDAD, July 27 (Reuters) – Iraq marked its longest post-election deadlock on Wednesday as infighting among Shi’ite and Kurdish groups in particular prevents the formation of a government, hampering reforms needed as the country struggles to recover from decades of conflict.
More than nine months since an October election, lawmakers tasked with choosing a president and prime minister looked no closer to an agreement, bringing the country to a record 290 days without a head of state or cabinet.
The last longest deadlock was in 2010, when after 289 days Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki got a second term.
The outgoing government of Prime Minister Mustafa al-Kadhimi continues to run the country. If parties cannot agree on a new government, Kadhimi might stay on as caretaker until new elections can be held.
In a sign of further potential delays, thousands of supporters of populist Shi’ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr stormed Baghdad’s empty parliament late on Wednesday, chanting slogans against his Shi’ite political rivals just days after they indicated agreement on a potential prime minister.
The paralysis has left Iraq without a budget for 2022, holding up spending on much-needed infrastructure projects and economic reform.
Iraqis say the situation is exacerbating a lack of services and jobs even as Baghdad earns record oil income because of high crude prices and has seen no major wars since the defeat of Islamic State five years ago.
“There’s no government, so there’s no budget, streets remain potholed, power and water are scarce and there’s poor healthcare and education,” said Mohammed Mohammed, a 68-year-old retired civil servant from the southern city of Nassiriya.
The same conditions Mohammed described fuelled mass protests across Baghdad and southern Iraq in 2019.
Demonstrators demanded the removal of parties that have been in power since the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that toppled dictator Saddam Hussein, accusing them of rampant corruption that has stopped Iraq moving forward. Security forces and militiamen killed hundreds of protesters and the protests fizzled out in 2020.
Kadhimi took office as a compromise candidate in response to the demonstrations, promising to punish killers of protesters and hold an early election which was held on Oct. 10.
Most of those who protested have given up hope for change.
“Whatever government forms, it’ll be made up of the people and parties who killed our friends,” said Ali al-Khayali, an anti-government activist who participated in the demonstrations.
SQUABBLING PARTIES

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Supporters of Iraqi Shi’ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr protest against corruption inside the parliament building in Baghdad, Iraq July 27, 2022. REUTERS/Thaier Al-Sudani

Iraqi government formation often takes months and requires the buy-in of all main political parties.
Since Saddam was toppled, Shi’ite parties which represent the country’s demographic majority have held the post of prime minister, Kurds the presidency and Sunnis the role of parliament speaker.
Sharpening divisions within those groups have made this process especially long.
In the Shi’ite camp, the biggest October vote winner, Sadr withdrew his 74 lawmakers from parliament last month after he failed to form a government that would exclude his Shi’ite rivals, most of whom who are backed by Iran and have heavily-armed paramilitary wings.
Sadr’s withdrawal ceded dozens of seats to those parties, but he has indicated he could stir up unrest among his millions-strong popular base – and his own militia – if they try to form a government he disapproves of. read more
Sadr this month effectively vetoed the candidacy of arch-rival Maliki, accusing the former premier of corruption in a Tweet.
Sadr’s rivals floated another candidate, Mohammed Shiya al-Sudani, for prime minister, but Sadr appears to oppose his candidacy because he is an ally of Maliki.
“Sudani is just a shadow of Maliki,” said a member of Sadr’s political party, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorised to give statements to the media.
Sadr’s supporters broke into Baghdad’s fortified Green Zone, which hosts foreign embassies and government buildings in central Baghdad, on Wednesday, streaming past police and chanting “Maliki you are garbage”.
“We’re going to demonstrate until corrupt politicians and groups backed by Iran are gone,” Sheikh Safaa al-Baghdadi, a religious teacher, said shortly before protesters entered parliament.
Disagreement among the main Kurdish parties that run the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region in northern Iraq meanwhile prevents the selection of a president – who, once chosen by parliament, names a prime minister.
The Patriotic Union of Kurdistan party has held the presidency since 2003.
Their rivals, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), which claimed the largest number of Kurdish votes by far, are insisting on their own candidate for president. Neither side appears willing to budge.
“We’ve not been able to agree so far. The post of president shouldn’t just be for one Kurdish party for life,” said Shirwan Dubardani, a KDP lawmaker.

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Libya’s parliament Speaker in Turkey for rapprochement

Libyan Parliament Speaker Aguila Saleh travelled to Turkey Monday to seek rapprochement with Ankara to break the political deadlock in the oil-rich country which currently has two rival governments.
The head of the Turkish-Libyan Friendship Group, Ambassador Ahmed Yildiz received Saleh, Al Wasat news website reports.
Saleh will meet a number of senior Turkish officials during his stay in Ankara to seek agreement with Turkish authorities on the way forward in Libya.
The North African country currently has two rival administrations, namely a Government of National Stability led by former Ankara protégé and former interior minister Fathi Bashagha, and the Government of National Unity led by Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh.
Ankara currently backs Dbeibeh who was removed in February by the parliament at the expense of Bashagha.
Saleh, on July 20 told Al-Massar TV, that “politics are flexible and subject to development and change, there is no permanent rivalry,” and that “the interests of the Turks are linked to our interests.”

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Libyan HoR Speaker, PC Deputy Head meet with Turkish President in Ankara

Date: Tuesday, August 2, 2022 – The LibyaUpdate.com

Speaker of the Libyan House of Representatives (HoR), Aqila Saleh, accompanied by the Deputy Head of the Presidential Council (PC), Abdulla al-Lafi, met Tuesday in Ankara with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
Al-Lafi said, via Twitter, that the meeting with Erdogan dealt with political developments, noting that the views agreed on preserving Libya’s unity, expediting the holding of elections, through one strong government, and emphasizing the exclusion of a military solution.
For its part, the Turkish state-run Anadolu Agency said that the meeting between Erdogan, Saleh and al-Lafi took place in the presidential complex away from media.
It added that the meeting was attended by the Speaker of the Turkish Parliament, Mustafa Sentop, who had previously met with Saleh.
Sentop and Saleh chaired a meeting of the two countries’ delegations after their bilateral meeting at the Turkish Parliament headquarters in Ankara.
Sentop said that the existing relations between Turkey and Libya extend back to ancient eras, indicating that strengthening relations between the parliaments of the two countries will reflect positively on the rest of the fields and sectors.

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Defence Minister: Turkiye has one goal from military operations in Syria

August 2, 2022 at 1:57 pm | Published in: Europe & RussiaMiddle EastNewsSyriaTurkey

Turkish Defence Minister, Hulusi Akar, said the only goal that his country wishes to achieve from carrying out military operations outside its borders, including in Syria, is to combat terrorist organisations.

He pointed out that the Turkish forces have neutralised 2,226 terrorists since the beginning of this year in the context of combating terrorist organisations.
The Turkish Minister denied claims that Ankara has any ambitions to invade and control neighbouring countries’ lands and said, “Turkiye respects the sovereignty and territorial integrity of neighbouring countries, and Ankara’s struggle against terrorist organisations active in Syria and Iraq is also beneficial to both countries.”
He noted that Turkiye attaches great importance to not causing any harm to innocent civilians, the environment and historical, religious and cultural heritage during anti-terrorist operations.
“Turks, Kurds, Arabs, Sunnis and Alawites are brothers. Turkiye does not target any of these segments. Ankara is only seeking to eliminate terrorist organisations. Everyone should realise that,” he added, stressing that Turkiye’s new strategy in combating terrorism is to strike terrorists wherever they are.
Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has previously said that his country is planning to establish a safe zone at a depth of 30 km in northern Syria, and to cleanse the areas of Tel Rifaat and Manbij from terrorists.

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