Category: North Africa

  • U.S. teenager accused of seeking to join al Qaeda-linked Syrian group – chicagotribune.com

    U.S. teenager accused of seeking to join al Qaeda-linked Syrian group – chicagotribune.com

    (Reuters) – An 18-year-old Chicago-area man accused of planning to join an al Qaeda-linked group fighting in Syria has been arrested by the FBI, the agency said on Saturday.

    Abdella Ahmad Tounisi of Aurora, Illinois, was taken into custody late on Friday as he prepared to board a plane at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport bound for Turkey, the FBI said in a statement.

    It added that Tounisi was a friend of Adel Daoud, an American accused of trying to stage a bombing outside a downtown Chicago bar last year. The agency said Tounisi had not been involved in that plot.

    Tounisiappeared before a U.S. magistrate on Saturday on one count of attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization. He was ordered held until his next court appearance on Tuesday, the FBI said.

    A criminal complaint accused Tounisi of making online contact in March with a person he thought was a recruiter for Jabhat al-Nusrah, the militant Islamist Syrian group that the U.S. government calls a foreign terrorist organization operating as a wing of al Qaeda in Iraq.

    The supposed recruiter was an FBI employee working undercover, the agency said.

    Tounisi said in emails to the FBI employee that he planned to get to Syria via Turkey and was willing to die in the Syrian struggle, the complaint said.

    Syria is in the grips of a civil war that began in 2011 as a revolt against President Bashar al-Assad and has killed more than 70,000 people.

    On April 10, Tounisi bought an airline ticket for a flight from Chicago to Istanbul. On Thursday, the undercover FBI employee gave him a bus ticket for travel from Istanbul to Gaziantep, Turkey, near the border with Syria, the complaint said.

    Tounisi’s attorney, Michael Madden, of the federal public defender program could not be reached for comment.

    Tounisi faces a maximum of 15 years in prison if convicted.

    The 2012 arrest of Daoud, 19, also involved his alleged communication with an undercover member of the FBI. The fake bomb that Daoud tried to detonate outside a Chicago bar was provided to him by an undercover FBI agent, authorities said.

    Daoud was indicted on two counts of attempting to use a weapon of mass destruction and maliciously attempting to use an explosive to destroy a building. He pleaded not guilty in October in federal court.

    (Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Peter Cooney)

    via U.S. teenager accused of seeking to join al Qaeda-linked Syrian group – chicagotribune.com.

  • Magarief has heart surgery in Turkey

    Magarief has heart surgery in Turkey

    Michel Cousins.

    magarief

    GNC President Mohamed Magarief

    Tripoli, 15 March 2103:

    The president of the General National Congress, Mohamed Magarief, had heart surgery in Istanbul yesterday, Thursday.

    A statement on his Facebook page today said he had gone to Turkey for medical investgations following pains and as a result had a stent inserted into a coronary artery.

    He is now in good health and should leave hospital shortly, the statement read.

    His office staff were unaware of the operation. When contacted earlier today, a member of the office said that Magarief was in Turkey but “genuinely did not know” if he had had surgery.

    The Facebook page statement said that Magarief thanked all those who asked about him in his absence, and assured them that he would return to work in the next two days, God willing.

    A stent reduces chest pains and can enable patients to survive a severe heart attack.

    Magarief has been under intense pressure  in recent weeks. Congress has been occupied and attacked, and trying to keep it operating normally in such circumstances would have taxed the healthiest of constitutions.

    via Magarief has heart surgery in Turkey | Libya Herald.

  • Turkey and Libya draw closer over police training

    Turkey and Libya draw closer over police training

    Premier Zeidan congratulates the first of the Libyan police graduates

    Tripoli, 19 February 2013:

    Prime Minister Ali Zeidan was in Istanbul today, Tuesday, to hand out diplomas to new Libyan police graduates who have successfully completed their training in Turkey.

    The award-ceremony was for 817 police graduates, who have completed seven and a half months’ training at the Adile Sadullah Mermerci Police Training Centre in Istanbul.

    Zeidan thanked the Turkish authorities for the police training programme, which was part of a Memorandum of Understanding signed between Libya and Turkey. He spoke of the long-term cooperation between the two countries and stressed how important continued good relations with Turkey were for the new Libya.

    Zeidan’s visit to Turkey appears to be part of intensified efforts to resolve economic relations between the two countries. It has been estimated that Turkish firms are owed some $20 million in back payments and compensation.

    More new Libyan police recruits are also being trained in Qatar, the UAE, Jordan and the UK.

    via Turkey and Libya draw closer over police training | Libya Herald.

  • Turkey sets its sights on Africa

    Turkey sets its sights on Africa

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is visiting Gabon, Niger and Senegal as part of an African tour. China, India and Brazil have all increased their presence on the continent. Now Turkey is in the mix.

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    First stop Gabon. This is where Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Sunday (06.01.2012) began his official visit to Africa. His itinerary also includes stops in Niger and Senegal.

    Located on the Gulf of Guinea, Gabon is one of the resource-rich countries in Africa, and when measured by gross domestic product, it is one of the richest countries on the continent.

    In contrast, Niger is one of the world’s poorest countries, according to the 2011 United Nations Human Development Index (HDI).

    Somali President Sheik Sharif Sheik Ahmed and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, hospital. (Foto:AU-UN IST, Stuart Price/AP/dapd) Erdogan visited Somalia in August 2011to highlight the need for famine relief

    The Index is used to measure poverty, literacy, education, life expectancy and other development factors. However, the landlocked country plays an important role as an exporter of raw materials, especially uranium.

    Senegal is one of the most politically and economically stable countries in West Africa, with a relatively well-functioning administrative structure. Nonetheless, the country’s economic growth still lags behind other countries in the West African Economic Community (ECOWAS). According to the 2011 United Nations HDI, Senegal occupies position 155 out of 187countries. This is where Erdogan’s six-day African trip is set to end.

    Spreading tentacles

    Under the leadership of Erdogan’s AK Party, Turkey has been developing the African market. The first signal of this diplomatic offensive came in 1998 with the formulation of a new policy towards Africa.

    Turkey declared 2005 as the official “Year of Africa”. This was followed by the first state visit by a Turkish prime minister to South Africa and Ethiopia. Later the African Union honored Turkey by granting it observer status.

    Gero Erdmann, an expert on Africa from the Leibnitz Institute of Global and Area Studies (GIGA), told DW that Ankara’s interest in Africa started even earlier. In his opinion, Turkey’s move was “made necessary by the reorientation of Turkish politics after the end of the Cold War.”

    Currently Turkey has 17 embassies in sub-Saharan Africa and is planning to open more diplomatic missions on the African continent.

    According to a study by Erdmann, the Turkish State Administration on Religious Affairs ( known as the Diyanet) has opened many private schools and vocational training opportunities for African imams with the aim of providing an enlightened form of Islam.

    A Turkish Airlines plane in the sky. Foto by dpa +++(c) dpa Turkish Airlines has increased flights to Africa

    Africa has become a top priority in Ankara.

    According to Dr. Gülistan Gürbey, lecturer at the Otto Suhr Institute in Berlin, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu takes a personal interest in developing the country’s policy towards Africa. It was Davutoglu who, while working at university in the 90s, developed a policy paper. The concept of “strategic depth”, according to Gürbey, is a return to the Ottoman past and a religious-cultural muslim identity.

    “Modern Turkey sees itself as a key country from multiple continents,” the lecturer said.

    The bigger picture

    Turkey’s new interest in Africa is reflected in trade statistics. Its economic interest in the continent is currently not based on the need for raw materials and energy resources, but rather in seeking a market for Turkish products.

    Trade between Ankara and Africa has increased five times since 2002 when Turkey steadily began to do business with Africa. Turkish investors are mainly keen on infrastructure and building projects such as in Ethiopia and Sudan, or textiles and food processing in South Africa.

    Unlike other competitors, who at first pursue a resource policy, Turkey has a strategic interest in Africa, says Gero Erdmann from the GIGA Institute in Leibnitz.

    Gero Erdmann and Gülistan Gürbey at a GIGA conference on Turkey in Africa Autor/Copyright: Yilma Hinz, DW, Gero Erdmann(left) and Gülistan Gürbey (right) at a GIGA conference on Turkey in Africa

    “Turkey wants to garner UN votes in Africa for itself because it would like to have a permanent seat on the Security Council,” Erdmann said.

    Ankara’s strategy is to win the support of African countries in international forums in a highly visible development policy. One example is the drought in Somalia.

    ‘The Ottoman syndrome’

    Turkey’s relationship with Africa, as in the Middle East has been met with criticism both at home and in parts of Europe.

    Liberal politicians and scholars have hinted at a supposedly pro-Arab, Islamist orientation and are wary of neo-Ottoman intentions. Other observers question how a country that is in the course of applying for EU membership, can be associated with human rights abuses, repression of religious freedom and disregard for the rule of law.

    In Africa, Turkey sees itself as a defender of human rights, as witnessed in the 2011 4th UN Conference on Least Developed Countries which was hosted by Istanbul.

    According to Erdmann, the lack of a colonial history link to Africa makes Turkey an attractive partner for African governments and not so much a player in the new scramble for African resources.

    via Turkey sets its sights on Africa | Africa | DW.DE | 08.01.2013.

  • Algeria, Turkey renew gas deal for 10 years

    Algeria, Turkey renew gas deal for 10 years

    ALGIERS (AFP) – Algeria and Turkey have decided to renew for 10 years from 2014 an agreement for Algeria to deliver four billion cubic metres of gas annually to Turkey, Energy Minister Youcef Yousfi said on Saturday.

    photo_1357411715240_1_0-18egtq3The official APS news agency said it was “decided to extend the agreement by 10 years, with the possibility of increasing the volume of gas exported.”

    Algeria and Turkey signed a 20-year agreement in 1988 on the sale and purchase of four billion cubic metres of gas annually, and which came into effect in 1994.

    Speaking after a meeting in Algiers with visiting Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz, Yousfi told reporters that Algeria’s Sonatrach and Turkey’s Botas have “already decided on the conditions and terms of the new agreement.”

    Turkey’s rising gas needs are expected to quadruple over the next 10 years.

    “We have said we wish to increase our imports to six billion cubic metres a year. Everything will depend on Algeria’s export capacity,” Yildiz said.

    via Algeria, Turkey renew gas deal for 10 years – The West Australian.

  • 2 suspects held in Istanbul over killing of U.S. ambassador Chris Stevens: report

    2 suspects held in Istanbul over killing of U.S. ambassador Chris Stevens: report

    2 suspects held in Istanbul over killing of U.S. ambassador Chris Stevens: report

    Suspects are Tunisian citizens and have been detained at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport, a Turkish broadcaster reported.

    By Reuters / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

    Friday, October 5, 2012, 7:40 AM

    EPA

    Christopher Stevens was killed in an attack on the U.S. embassy in Libya on Sept. 11.

    Two suspects in the killing of U.S. ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens have been detained at Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport, Turkish broadcaster Kanal D reported on its website on Friday.

    LIBYA AMBASSADOR CHRIS STEVENS KILLED

    It said Turkish police held the two suspects, described as Tunisian citizens, as they tried to enter the country with fake passports.

    Police in Istanbul declined comment on the report.

    PHOTOS: LIBYANS PROTEST TERROR KILLINGS: ‘THIS DOES NOT REPRESENT US’

    Stevens was one of four Americans who died when Islamist gunmen stormed the Benghazi consulate last month.

    ASMAA WAGUIH/REUTERS

    A Libyan government militia guarding the main entrance of the U.S. consulate fixes a note written by Libyans against the attack.

    stevens 3 web

    John Minchillo/AP

    Dilan Samo, 13, holds a picture of slain U.S. ambassador to Libya Christopher Stevens during a candlelight vigil outside the Libyan Embassy on Sept. 13 in New York.

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