Sabtu, 28 Agustus 2021

US warns of more terror attacks at Kabul airport - CNA

KABUL: Suicide bomb threats hung over the final phase of the US military's airlift operation from Kabul on Sunday (Aug 29), with President Joe Biden warning another attack was highly likely before the evacuations end.

More than 112,000 people have fled Afghanistan via the massive US-led airlift since the Taliban movement swept back into power a fortnight ago, and the operation is winding down despite Western powers saying thousands may be left behind.

What had already been a chaotic and desperate evacuation turned bloody on Thursday when a suicide bomber from the local chapter of the Islamic State group targeted US troops stopping huge crowds of people from entering the airport.

More than 100 people died in the attack, including 13 US service personnel, slowing down the airlifts ahead of Biden's deadline for evacuations to end by Tuesday.

The Pentagon said Saturday retaliation drone strikes had killed two "high-level" IS extremists in eastern Afghanistan, but Biden warned of more attacks from the group.

"The situation on the ground continues to be extremely dangerous, and the threat of terrorist attacks on the airport remains high," Biden said.

"Our commanders informed me that an attack is highly likely in the next 24-36 hours."

The US embassy in Kabul later released an alert warning of credible threats at specific areas of the airport, including access gates.

In recent years, the Islamic State's Afghanistan-Pakistan chapter has been responsible for some of the deadliest attacks in those countries.

They have massacred civilians at mosques, public squares, schools, and even hospitals.

While both IS and the Taliban are hardline Sunni Islamists, they are bitter foes - with each claiming to be the true flag-bearers of jihad.

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2021-08-29 03:24:54Z
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US believes new Kabul airport attack 'highly likely' soon, says President Joe Biden - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON (AFP) - US military commanders believe that another terror attack like the deadly suicide bombing at Kabul airport is "highly likely in the next 24-36 hours," President Joe Biden warned on Saturday (Aug 28).

After a briefing from his national security team, Biden said in a statement that a US drone strike targeting the Islamic State-Khorasan (IS-K) group, which claimed responsibility for Thursday's carnage at the airport, was "not the last."

"The situation on the ground continues to be extremely dangerous, and the threat of terrorist attacks on the airport remains high," Biden said.

"Our commanders informed me that an attack is highly likely in the next 24-36 hours."

Scores of Afghan civilians were killed in the Kabul bombing on Thursday, along with 13 US troops - several of them born around the time US military operations in Afghanistan began 20 years ago.

The Pentagon said on Saturday it had killed two "high profile" targets - logistics experts for the militant group - and wounded another in a drone strike in eastern Afghanistan in retaliation for the suicide bombing.

No civilians were hurt in the attack, Major-General Hank Taylor told a news conference in Washington.

"The fact that two of these individuals are no longer walking on the face of the Earth, that's a good thing," Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said.

US troops have been scrambling in dangerous and chaotic conditions to complete a massive evacuation operation from the Kabul airport by an Aug 31 deadline.

Biden has pledged to stick to the agreed cut-off and had vowed to punish those responsible for the suicide blast.

He said on Saturday that the drone attack would not be the last.

"We will continue to hunt down any person involved in that heinous attack and make them pay," he said.

"Whenever anyone seeks to harm the United States or attack our troops, we will respond. That will never be in doubt."

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2021-08-28 20:19:09Z
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US starts troop withdrawal from Kabul; hits Islamic State with drone attack - CNA

DANGEROUS FINAL DAYS

The White House said the next few days were likely to be the most dangerous of the evacuation operation. The United States and allies have taken about 111,900 people out of Afghanistan in the past two weeks, the Pentagon has said.

With another attack against Kabul airport a near certainty, according to US officials, the US Embassy in Kabul warned Americans to avoid the airport.

The last British flight evacuating civilians from Afghanistan left Kabul on Saturday. British troops would take small numbers of Afghan citizens with them as they leave this weekend, a defense ministry spokesperson said. Armed forces chief Nick Carter said hundreds of people who had worked with Britain would not make it through.

In the Pentagon's strike on militant suspects in Nangarhar, a US official said on Friday that an MQ-9 Reaper unmanned aircraft flown from the Middle East targeted an Islamic State militant who was planning attacks and was in a car with an associate.

Residents of Jalalabad, the provincial capital, said they had heard several explosions around midnight and community elder Malik Adib said three people were killed and four were wounded in an air strike, adding that he had been summoned by the Taliban investigating the incident.

"Women and children are among the victims," said Adib, though he did not have information about their identity.

The US military said in a statement that it knew of no civilian casualties.

While Kabul's airport has been in chaos, the rest of the city has been generally calm. The Taliban have told residents to hand over government equipment including weapons and vehicles within a week, the group's spokesman said.

The airport attack added fuel to criticism Biden faced at home and abroad for the chaos after Afghanistan's government and military collapsed before a lightning Taliban advance. He has defended his decisions, saying the United States long ago achieved its rationale for invading in 2001.

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2021-08-28 18:02:00Z
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Taleban fighters ensure orderly evacuations at Kabul airport after blast - The Straits Times

KABUL (AFP) - Order replaced chaos at Kabul airport Saturday (Aug 28) with Taleban fighters escorting a steady stream of Afghans from buses to the main passenger terminal, handing them over to US troops for evacuation.

Gone are the tens of thousands clamouring to get inside the airport grounds in the hope of getting aboard a flight before Aug 31, when the US-led evacuation ends and the last foreign troops depart.

The deadly Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) suicide blast at a secondary entrance on Thursday likely scared away many looking for a way to escape the return to power of the hardline Islamists, but the Taleban have also sealed off all roads leading to the airport and are now only letting sanctioned buses pass.

"We have lists from the Americans... if your name is on the list, you can come through," one Taleban official told AFP near the civilian passenger terminal of Hamid Karzai International Airport. "If your name isn't here, then you cannot come through."

On Saturday, AFP saw more than a dozen small- and medium-sized buses disgorge tense-looking passengers at the main gate of the airport.

It was unclear who had organised the buses - or where they had come from - and the Taleban officials and guards present would not allow the passengers to be interviewed.

The men and women were separated and made to walk on opposite sides of the road, but both groups carried infants or led children by the hand - some oblivious to their ordeal and skipping as if on an adventure.

Everyone was stripped of their luggage apart from what they could keep in a plastic bag - but a Taleban official was quick to offer an explanation.

"Because of the blast, the Americans won't let them take anything," he said.

"We tell them to take the money and the gold in their pockets. If they leave clothes we will give to other people."

Heavily armed Taleban fighters were seen throughout the grounds and auxiliary buildings of the airport complex, while US marines peered at them from the passenger terminal roof.

After a 20-year war, the foes were within open sight of each other, separated by just 30 metres, and holding fire.

Also in view of the American troops were Badri special forces in humvees gifted to the Afghan defence forces, but now flying the white Taleban flag.

The US and other nations that had a military stake in Afghanistan planned for years to offer sanctuary to those who helped their troops - some more generously than others.

But plans for a staggered and orderly relocation were thrown into disarray by the Taleban's stunningly swift return to power.

Until Thursday's ISIS attack, tens of thousands of people had besieged the airport since Aug 15, when the Taleban rolled into Kabul having swept through the rest of the country in a lightning offensive.

The Taleban insist there will be no recriminations for those who helped foreign forces, but many Afghans - particularly the country's educated middle class - fear a return to the fundamentalist Islamist rule that effectively barred women from public life and punished crime with public floggings and executions.

The Pentagon says more than 110,000 Afghans and foreigners have been evacuated since Aug 14 - most to start a new life abroad with nothing more than their skills and what they can carry in a plastic bag.

An AFP photographer saw a journalist friend Saturday among those brought by bus for evacuation - he had worked for the US-led coalition force's media department and was considered at risk of Taleban retribution.

They embraced briefly before parting ways.

"Good luck," they told each other - one staying behind, and the other on his way to a new life.

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2021-08-28 15:16:52Z
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'You'll regret this': Yakuza gang boss threatens judge in Japan over death sentence - The Straits Times

TOKYO - Satoru Nomura has been called "God" and "Emperor" by his underlings, who would wait on him 24 hours a day in a palatial compound in Fukuoka.

But the 74-year-old head of Japan's most violent yakuza gang, often seen in spiffy bespoke suits, and chauffeured around in a Mercedes-Benz, will now have to swop his luxurious surroundings for a jail cell to await possible execution.

Nomura was sentenced to death on Tuesday (Aug 24) for the murder of a civilian and attempted murder of three others between 1998 and 2014. His No. 2, Fumio Tanoue, 65, was given life behind bars.

"You'll regret this for the rest of your life," Nomura, who had been composed throughout the trial, let rip at Presiding Judge Ben Adachi upon hearing his verdict and sentence. "I asked for a fair judgment, but this is not fair at all. Where's the proof?"

Tanoue, meanwhile, called the judge an "awful person".

Local police are not taking the threat lightly, and have beefed up protection for the judge, prosecutors and witnesses given the yakuza's penchant for exacting revenge.

"When stripped of their armour, syndicate leaders reveal their true selves: cunning, devious, and depraved individuals who grasp at dominion and use murder as a tool to eliminate all who oppose them in a quest to acquire what makes them feel whole," criminologist Enzo Yaksic told The Straits Times.

The mobster duo helm the Kudo-kai, the only organised crime syndicate in all of Japan to be branded a "dangerous designated criminal group" for its brutality.

The gang, based in the port city of Kitakyushu in the south-western prefecture of Fukuoka, has been accused of terrorising ordinary folk over decades and is said to be behind a spate of public assaults and extortions for "protection money".

Nomura and Tanoue have appealed what they call a "ridiculous" verdict. The process could take years, but unless he can get the verdict overturned, Nomura could eventually be headed for the hangman's noose.

Penchant for violence

Nomura was born in 1946, the youngest of six children in a rich farming family.

He spent his riches on gambling as a teenager and soon fell into delinquency. He was thrown into a juvenile home for a spate of crimes, including stealing a car.

Nomura did not graduate from secondary school, and in his 20s was co-opted into the gang by a senior member of an affiliate group of the Kudo-kai.

His wealth bankrolled the gang in crimes such as real estate fraud and illegal gambling dens, through which he reaped huge profits to the tune of an average of 30 million yen (S$368,000) per night.

He gradually rose to head the organisation, which, at the height of its influence in 2008, had about 1,210 members. This plunged to 430 members by last year.

The first of four cases tied to Nomura and Tanoue was in February 1998, when a 70-year-old leader of a fishery cooperative was gunned down in public after he refused to do business with Nomura.

This would not be the end of it. Judge Adachi noted how the grudge must have simmered as Kudo-kai struck again in March 2014, the victim this time a seemingly random dentist who was stabbed in a carpark.

But he was the grandson of the late fisherman. His fiancee's family was so shaken by the attack that the wedding was called off. The judge said this was likely an attempt to intimidate the family into submission.

These cases bookend two other assaults. In 2012, a retired police officer who had been probing Kudo-kai was shot in the leg, while in 2013, a nurse at a cosmetic surgery clinic was stabbed after Nomura was displeased by her attitude and the outcome of his operation.

The four incidents form the charges against Nomura and Tanoue, but these were allegedly not all. A series of other attacks have been tied to the Kudo-kai, including in 2003 when a hand grenade was lobbed into a nightclub in Kitakyushu, injuring 12.

Eateries that refuse to do Kudo-kai's bidding have been subject to arson. And employees of two construction firms were targeted between 2008 and 2011.

Mr Yaksic observed that leaders of criminal syndicates are often "gratified by the total submission of their victims and underlings", and would stop at nothing to eliminate obstacles to their immediate goals.

The direct perpetrators behind these attacks have all been nabbed and punished. The gunman behind the 1998 killing has been jailed for life.

But Nomura and Tanoue got away with it until now. They were first arrested in 2014 but were out on bail till Tuesday's verdict.

Unprecedented verdict

Law enforcement decided enough was enough in 2014, when police launched Operation Summit in a bid to bring the gang to its knees by "cutting off its heads".

Tuesday's verdict was the culmination of a trial that started in October 2019 and comprised 62 hearings and the testimonies of 91 people, including former gang members and police officers.

Legal experts described the case as a landmark ruling for numerous reasons, saying the judgment will impact future probes into organised crime.

Notably, there was no direct evidence connecting Nomura and Tanoue to the crimes.

They were not at the scene, but the verdict relied heavily on a concept dubbed "employer's responsibility" as inferred through the clear, hierarchical chain of command within the gang.

Judge Adachi said, in what was the first death sentence passed on a sitting syndicate boss in Japan, that it was only logical that the underlings had committed the crimes because of the "strong organisational structure in which superiors' orders must be followed".

Further, the four victims were not linked except by Nomura's personal grudges. The judge saw no question that Nomura, as ringleader, would know of the planned crimes in advance.

Also, while the death penalty can be given to convicted murderers in Japan, it is not meted out lightly and is usually reserved for serial killers.

But the judge noted the egregious nature of Nomura's crimes as he agreed that the death penalty was warranted.

"There can be no extenuating circumstances for the motives and circumstances of the organisation's attack on the regular citizens," the judge said. "The criminal responsibility is so serious that the choice of capital punishment is unavoidable."

Kyushu University law professor Koji Tabuchi told NHK: "The verdict that does not exonerate top management for a crime committed by their underlings is significant. It seems that the growing citizen awareness and desire to clean up society might have influenced the court's decision."

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2021-08-28 08:46:57Z
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US drone strike targets ISIS-K 'planner' in Afghanistan - The Straits Times

WASHINGTON (AFP) - The US military said on Friday (Aug 27) it had carried out a drone strike against a "planner" of the Islamic State-Khorasan, or ISIS-K, the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) affiliate that claimed credit for the deadly suicide bombing at Kabul airport.

"The unmanned air strike occurred in the Nangarhar province of Afghanistan. Initial indications are that we killed the target," said Captain Bill Urban of the Central Command.

"We know of no civilian casualties," he added in a statement announcing the first reported US strike since the attack.

The strike, launched from outside Afghanistan, came as the airlift of evacuees from Kabul airport continued under much-heightened security after Thursday's attack.

At least 78 people were killed, including 13 US troops, when a suicide attacker exploded a bomb in the dense crowd in front of the airport's Abbey Gate. Some media outlets reported that fatalities numbered close to 200. US officials said gunmen opened fire after the explosion, adding to the carnage. The attack was carried out by the violent Afghan arm of the ISIS terror group.

Following the attack, United States President Joe Biden vowed retaliation.

"To those who carried out this attack as well as anyone who wishes America harm, know this: We will not forgive. We will not forget. We will hunt you down and make you pay," Mr Biden said on Thursday.

On Friday afternoon, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the military believed the group planned to strike the airlift again.

"We still believe there are credible threats... specific, credible threats," he said.

The US Embassy in Kabul said in a security alert: "US citizens who are at the Abbey gate, East gate, North gate or the New Ministry of Interior gate now should leave immediately."

It added: "Because of security threats at Kabul airport, we continue to advise US citizens to avoid travelling to the airport and to avoid airport gates."

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2021-08-28 02:16:14Z
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Jumat, 27 Agustus 2021

US strikes Islamic State target in Afghanistan, pushes airlift into final stage - CNA

With the airlift window narrowing sharply ahead of an Aug 31 deadline, more than 5,000 people remain inside Kabul airport awaiting evacuation, and thousands more continue to throng the perimeter gates pleading for entry.

The carnage of Thursday's suicide attack only injected further stress and tension into a situation already fraught with panic and despair for those wanting to leave and high risk for the US forces tasked with securing the operation.

The attack followed a chorus of warnings about an imminent threat and, as crowds gathered outside the airport Saturday, the United States issued a fresh alert for US citizens to leave the areas around the main gates "immediately".

'FUTURE ATTEMPTS'

The warning came just hours after the Pentagon said the evacuation operation continued to face "specific, credible" threats.

"We certainly are prepared and would expect future attempts, absolutely," Pentagon spokesman John Kirby told reporters.

The Pentagon clarified that there was one explosion Thursday, not two as previously believed.

At the White House, President Joe Biden's press secretary Jen Psaki said US national security experts consider another attack is "likely" and the next few days will be "the most dangerous period to date".

Taliban spokesman Bilal Karimi said on Twitter that fighters had moved into parts of the military side of Kabul airport, but the Pentagon pushed back, with Kirby saying gates and operations were still being run by the US military.

In one of the greater ironies after two decades of war, racing to meet the August 31 deadline for the US withdrawal has meant close cooperation with the Taliban on evacuee movements and the IS threat.

The head of US forces at the airport, Rear Admiral Peter Vasely, is in constant contact with the Taliban official overseeing security around the airport.

In most cases, US officials say, the Taliban has expedited the passage into the airport of foreign nationals, Afghans with visas to the United States and even Afghans who face threats from the Taliban due to their political or social activism or work for the media.

Under enormous criticism at home and abroad for his handling of the Afghan crisis and the US military withdrawal, Biden has pledged to stick to the airlift deadline and to punish those responsible for the suicide blast.

REFUGEE EXODUS

About 109,000 people have been flown out of the country since Aug 14, the day before the Taliban swept to power, according to the US government.

Some Western allies, including Britain and Spain, announced an end to their airlifts on Friday, following other nations such as Canada and Australia earlier in the week.

The United Nations said Friday it was bracing for a "worst-case scenario" of up to half a million more refugees from Afghanistan by the end of 2021.

The Taliban have promised a softer brand of rule compared with their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001, which ended when the United States invaded Afghanistan following the September 11 attacks.

But many Afghans fear a repeat of their brutal interpretation of Islamic law, as well as violent retribution for working with foreign militaries, Western missions or the previous US-backed government.

The role that women will be allowed to play in society has been one of the biggest concerns since the Taliban takeover, after women were banned from work and education and confined to the house during the group's previous rule.

Taliban official Sher Mohammad Abbas Stanikzai, the former deputy chief negotiator of peace talks in Doha, said Friday that women have "an innate right" to work.

"They can work, they can study, they can take part in politics and they can do business," he told a press conference.

MORE EXTREME

The Taliban have allowed US-led forces to conduct the airlift while they finalise plans for their government to be announced as soon as the American troops have left.

But the Islamic State jihadists, bloody rivals of the Taliban with a record of barbaric attacks, were intent on capitalising on the chaos in Kabul.

In recent years, the Islamic State's Afghanistan-Pakistan chapter has been responsible for some of the deadliest attacks in those countries.

It has massacred civilians at mosques, shrines, public squares and even hospitals.

"These are people that are even more extreme than the Taliban and are basically at war with the Taliban," Australian Defence Minister Peter Dutton said.

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2021-08-28 02:11:00Z
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