• MSN
  • Hotmail
  • More
    • Autos
    • My MSN
    • Video
    • Careers & Jobs
    • Personals
    • Weather
    • Delish
    • Quotes
    • White Pages
    • Games
    • Real Estate
    • Wonderwall
    • Horoscopes
    • Shopping
    • Yellow Pages
    • Local Edition
    • Traffic
    • Feedback
    • Maps & Directions
    • Travel
    • Full MSN Index
  • Bing
  • NBCNews.com
  • TODAY
  • Nightly News
  • Rock Center
  • Meet the Press
  • Dateline
  • msnbc
  • Breaking News
  • Newsvine
  • Home
  • US
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Travel
  • Local
  • Weather
Advertise | AdChoices
  • Recommended: Brazil's president salutes Brazil protests, cities cut bus fares
  • Recommended: G-8 leaders call for peace talks to end Syria's civil war
  • Recommended: 'Day of honor': Afghans take over national security from US-led forces
  • Recommended: Analysis: Iran's shock election result sets a challenge to Israel

First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

  • ↓ About this blog
  • ↓ Archives
    • Icons Email E-mail updates
    • Icons Twitter Follow on Twitter
    • Icons Feed Subscribe to RSS
  • 31
    May
    2013
    4:23pm, EDT

    Israel grapples with wave of north African migrants

    Israelis and African migrants share their feelings about coexisting in one neighborhood of south Tel Aviv.

    By Dave Copeland, NBC News

    TEL AVIV - Ruthie Jacobi, a longtime resident of the gritty south side of Israel’s largest city, says she’s fed up. 

    “Look at this,” said the 65-year-old retired schoolteacher, pointing to a small group of men fighting over a bicycle.  “These bicycles are all stolen, they come here to sell them, now they are quarrelling over it. It’s anarchy, nobody has control of it.”

    The crowd melted away when police arrived.

    Jacobi is not alone. Many residents are demanding that the government take control of the estimated 56,000 undocumented immigrants, mostly from northern Africa, who authorities say have settled in the country.

    Locals in the south Tel Aviv neighborhoods of Neve Shanan and Shapira say about 40,000 of those migrants are living in their area alone.

    They claim the local crime rate has risen and that many streets are no-go areas for Israelis, especially at night.

    Anger has spilled over into outright violence in recent weeks. Early last month, about 1,000 Israelis took to the streets to demand that African immigrants be deported in the Tel Aviv neighborhood of Hatikva. The protesters yelled “Blacks out,” attacked Africans on the street and broke windows of stores belonging immigrants.

    On Sunday, Israel’s High Court of Justice will likely decide the fate of the migrants, many of whom claim to be refugees fleeing conflicts in Sudan and Eritrea.

    Judges will consider whether a legal amendment that permits the detention of any asylum-seeker for a period of up to three years is unconstitutional.

    Baz Ratner / Reuters, file

    Israeli immigration officers escort an African migrant carrying luggage in south Tel Aviv June 13, 2012.

    Any migrant can be detained under the amendment, even those whom Israel has no intention of deporting because of dangers they would face to their lives upon their return.

    About 1,700 migrants – including women and children – are already being held in a new, purpose-built detention center in the Negev Desert. It has a capacity of 3,000.

    A legal petition by human rights groups argues that both Israeli and international law prohibits the detention of immigrants if it is not for the purpose of immediately deporting them.

    The impending court decision and rising public hostility, worries migrants like Ismail Ahmed, who is originally from war-torn Sudan. 

    “When I came from Sudan I realized that life was different here, much better than where I came from,” said Ahmed, who runs a small computer shop on Neve Shanan Street, a pedestrian area frequented by migrants. “But in the recent years, the last two years, I find that life is really getting harder, it’s threatening.”

    “It takes me back to the same situation where I came from,” he said.

    Where he came from is a nightmare.

    Many of the migrants have traveled across the vast deserts of North Africa – in some cases, a journey that has taken more than three years. They speak of torture, beatings and rape along the way.

    Until a year ago, Israel’s border with Egypt was just a line in the sand in the Sinai Desert marked with a few rolls of rusted barbed wire. Now authorities have constructed a 16-foot-high steel fence along its 144-mile stretch, making it virtually impossible for anyone to cross.

    But Israel is still faced with the question of what to do with those who already have made it over the fence.

    Migrants, and the charities working to help them, complain that the government has not processed enough asylum requests, leaving many of those in south Tel Aviv in legal limbo. 

    Orit Marom is a spokesman for ASSAF, a nonprofit organization that helps refugees and asylum-seekers Israel. “It’s clear that those asylum-seekers that are living among us will stay here for some time," he said.

    David Buimovitch / AFP - Getty Images, file

    An Israeli protester waves a poster of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu during a demonstration against African migrants in Tel Aviv on July 24, 2012.

    “Better we treat them as human beings, better we give them some rights, better we give them work permits in order that they will integrate normally in the different cities in Israel, than being a burden on south Tel Aviv residents, living with nothing.”

    Israel’s government insists it will treat migrants with fairness, but says many are not refugees from conflict but rather are economic migrants.

    Mark Regev, spokesman for the prime minister’s office, told NBC News: “These people who have entered Israel illegally will be treated fairly, according to international law.

    “Some will be repatriated, some will be sent to third countries and some will be allowed to stay in Israel. But we see most of them as economic migrants, not refugees. Most of them are young men of working age, where are all the women and children?”

    Some south Tel Aviv residents are pinning their hopes on new procedures under which undocumented migrants are held in a detention center until they are processed as Israeli citizens or deported.

    But for now, the majority are still living freely in south Tel Aviv.

    Tiran Rahum, an Israeli shopkeeper, talks to a group of concerned locals touring his neighborhood.

    “We are the minority and they are the majority, they are the advantaged and we are the disadvantaged,” he said. “We pay all our taxes, they pay nothing.”

    A few yards away, Mohammed Al Nour, a refugee from Sudan, described his life.

    “Life is very hard in Israel, I cannot find work,” he said in English.

    He then broke into Hebrew and described how he and about 40 of his friends had worked as laborers for a local building contractor for more than eight months. For the last two months they had not been paid and had no way of getting the money.

    Al Nour and his friends then left to sleep in a children’s playground that has been converted into a shelter.

    Related:

    • Israel warns of action over Russian plan to give missiles to Syria's Assad
    • Kerry backs $4 billion investment plan to boost Palestinian economy
    • NBC News' complete coverage of Israel

    712 comments

    You will see this more and more from around the world. If we protested about the illegals here, we would be branded as racists or bigots.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: israel, immigration, sudan, migrants, tel-aviv, featured, asylum
  • 9
    Apr
    2013
    11:15am, EDT

    5 UN peacekeepers, at least 7 civilians killed in ambush in South Sudan

    By Charlton Doki and Nirmala George, The Associated Press

    JUBA, South Sudan -- Five United Nations peacekeepers from India, and at least seven civilians, were killed Tuesday when armed rebels opened fire on a convoy in South Sudan.

    South Sudan's military spokesman, Col. Philip Aguer, blamed the attack on fighters led by David Yau Yau, a Sudan-backed rebel leader South Sudan's military has battled for months.

    The top U.N. envoy in South Sudan, Hilde Johnson, said in a statement that five peacekeepers and seven civilians working with the U.N. mission were killed. She said at least nine additional peacekeepers and civilians were injured and some remain unaccounted for.

    Aguer said the attack took place on a convoy traveling between the South Sudanese towns of Pibor and Bor on Tuesday morning.

    "Definitely this attack was carried out by David Yau Yau's militia," Aguer said. "They have been launching ambushes even on the SPLA for about six months now," he said, using the acronym for South Sudan's military.

    South Sudan ended decades of civil war with Sudan in 2005 and peacefully formed its own country in 2011. But the south is still plagued by internal violence and shaky relations with Sudan. Leaders in Khartoum, Sudan's capital, deny that they are arming Yau Yau.

    Syed Akbaruddin, spokesman of India's Ministry of External Affairs in New Delhi, India, said the convoy, which included 32 Indian soldiers, was attacked by rebels in Gurmukh in the volatile state of Jonglei. He said the casualties are being brought to the capital of South Sudan, Juba, and the injured will be sent to the U.N. mission hospital. The Indian embassy will work with the U.N. to bring the bodies back to India, he said.

    India has about 2,200 Indian army personnel in South Sudan. They are in two battalions. One is based in Jonglei and the other is in Malakal, in the Upper Nile, on the border with Sudan.

    The Indian embassy said it will inform families before releasing the names of the soldiers killed.

    The top U.N. envoy in South Sudan, Johnson, sent condolences to the families of the dead and injured.

    Related:

    South Sudan prisons in tatters after decades of war

    S. Sudan president: Sudan has declared war on us

    PhotoBlog: Building South Sudan from scratch

    © 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    12 comments

    You can bet North Sudan is handing weapons to this Yau Yau terrorist group. The fact that Yau Yau studied at a Christian school does not matter. If he is a tool to cause problems for the South the North which is an Muslims country will assist them. Muslims are beginning to reap what they have sown.  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, un, united-nations, south, sudan, peacekeepers, ambush, convoy, five-killed, seven-civilians
  • 1
    Apr
    2013
    5:06pm, EDT

    Sudan's president orders release of all political prisoners

    Ahmed Jadallah / Reuters

    Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir looks on during the opening of the Arab League summit in Doha on March 26. On Monday, he ordered the release of political prisoners.

    By Khalid Abdelaziz, Reuters
    KHARTOUM - Sudan's President Omar Hassan al-Bashir on Monday ordered the release of all political prisoners, a move cautiously welcomed by the opposition in the tightly-controlled African country.

    The announcement comes after Sudan and South Sudan agreed in March to end hostilities and resume cross-border oil flows after coming close to war a year ago. Khartoum had accused its southern neighbor of supporting rebels trying to topple Bashir.

    "I announce today my decision to release all political prisoners," Bashir told parliament. "I also renew a commitment to create a climate to hold a national dialogue with the other political forces."

    Bashir, in power since 1989, did not say when and how many prisoners would be released.

    Rights groups have accused the government of holding an unspecified number of dissidents since the security services cracked down hard on small protests against austerity measures unveiled by Bashir last year.

    In February, a U.N. human rights expert said Sudan was holding opposition figures and other detainees without trial and denying them urgent medical care.

    Sudan's weak and fractured opposition tried to bring "Arab Spring" protests to Khartoum, but failed to mobilize mass support.

    Kamal Omar, spokesman for the National Consensus Forces grouping of the main opposition parties, said Bashir's comments were a step in the right direction, but said more was needed.

    "This is a positive move but it needs to be accompanied by action on the ground," Omar said. "We need a climate that will allow political dialogue, freedom of expression and press freedom."

    Bashir's comments come after Vice President Ali Osman Taha last week invited rebel groups to help prepare a new constitution following the secession of the south in July 2011.

    Khartoum has accused Juba of backing rebels of the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-North) which took up arms in two border states around the time of South Sudan's independence.

    After the split, the two fell out over the position of their border, the status of disputed land, the division of national debt and how much the landlocked South should pay to export its oil through Sudan, and other issues.

    Rebels of the SPLM-North sided with the south during the civil war with Khartoum that led up to South Sudan's independence. But they were left inside Sudan after the partition.

    (Reporting by Khalid Abdelaziz; Writing by Ulf Laessing in Cairo; Editing by Jon Hemming) 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    7 comments

    I'm a native born Texan and former combat Marine in Vietnam. I've travelled extensively all over the world and found that these types of crimes are prevalent everywhere, including in the USA. Don't be so critcal of Brazil and Brazilians because they manage things pretty well their way. What happened …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, sudan, political-prisoners, omar-hassan-al-bashir
  • 4
    Dec
    2012
    12:56pm, EST

    South Sudan's elephants could be gone in five years, group warns

    F Grossmann / Wildlife Conservation Society

    People believed to be wildlife poachers dry meat in the wild in southern Sudan in a photo taken on July 30, 2008.

    By Hereward Holland, Reuters

    JUBA, South Sudan -- The once-thriving elephant population of South Sudan could be wiped out in five years if rampant poaching is not brought under control, a wildlife protection group said on Tuesday. 

    After decades of civil war the African country, which became independent last year, has fewer than 5,000 elephants left, down from around 130,000 in 1986, according to the United States-based Wildlife Conservation Society.

    Driven by demand from China, the price of ivory has quadrupled in the last few years, Paul Elkan, South Sudan director at WCS, said.

    "Within the next five years the elephants in South Sudan could completely be gone with the current rates of poaching," Elkan told reporters.



    He said 2011 was the worst year on record for poaching worldwide, with 24 tons of ivory seized. 

    Black market trade in wildlife and wildlife products is worth an estimated $10 billion per year, according to the Coalition Against Wildlife Trafficking, a group of government and wildlife organizations.

    Elkan said the southern rebel army ate much of the country's wildlife during the 1983-2005 civil war against the Khartoum government in the north. Raiders from the north also massacred wildlife, particularly elephants, he said.

    South Sudan's zebras and rhinos may have already been wiped out, Elkan said, warning that the new nation's giraffes are also on the brink of extinction.

    South Sudan's infrastructure has been devastated by years of war and economic neglect, and conservationists are now worried new road construction will make poaching and trafficking easier.

    "Those elephants that survived the war are having a hard time surviving the peace," Elkan said.

    Gabriel Changson Chang, South Sudan's minister of wildlife conservation and tourism, said South Sudan has struggled to prosecute poachers and smugglers because it lacks the laws to try them.

    The government hopes to pass anti-poaching legislation in the middle of 2013 to help end the illegal trade, he said.

    "There must be a legal framework so that when they are apprehended, they are tried according to specific articles of that act," Chang told reporters.

    He said the government was reviewing a 30-year land lease agreed in 2008 with the United Arab Emirates-based Al Ain National Wildlife. The deal gave the Gulf company a hotel and wildlife concession in the pristine grasslands of the eastern Boma National Park.

    The minister said the company had built a 50-room lodge on the concession but had not yet opened it.

    "We need to know if they are still interested in operating that facility or not. If not it will be auctioned out to other interested investors."

    South Sudan wants to set up a safari tourism industry based around the migration of an estimated 800,000 white eared kob antelope -- one of the largest migrations in the world with numbers that potentially rival the migrations in Tanzania's Serengeti plains. 

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    16 comments

    When you see park rangers having a half a dozen or more children living in one room huts you know that this problem is not going to be resolved. Until the African people and the west decide to educate and use contraceptives the problem of overpopulating the carrying capacity of their environments wi …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: environment, wildlife, sudan, elephants
  • 6
    Nov
    2012
    9:58am, EST

    Secret war against Iran and its allies heats up

    Reuters TV

    A still image taken from Israeli Defence Forces video footage shows what they say is a small unidentified aircraft shot down in a mid-air interception after it crossed into southern Israel Oct. 6, 2012.

    By Reuters

    WASHINGTON - From a suspected Israeli airstrike in Sudan to cyber warfare in the Gulf and a drone shot down over Israel, the largely hidden war between Iran and its foes seems heating up and spreading.

    Despite months of speculation, most experts and governments believe the risk of a direct Israeli strike on Tehran's nuclear program stirring regional conflict has eased, at least for now. But all sides, it seems, are finding other ways to fight.

    For the U.S. and European powers, the main focus remains on oil export sanctions that are inflicting ever more damage on Iran's economy.

    But the Obama administration and Israel have also ploughed resources into covert operations - a campaign that now appears to have prompted an increasingly sophisticated Iranian reaction.

    With Iranian hackers suspected of severely damaging Saudi oil facility computers and a suspected Hezbollah drone shot down over Israel, tactics and tools once seen as the sole purview of the United States are now clearly being used on both sides.

    Report: Iran mulls 'pre-emptive attack' against Israel; commander warns of 'World War III'

    The mounting body count in Syria, some believe, is also in part a consequence of the proxy war being waged there.

    "In many ways, it's reminiscent of the Cold War, particularly the proxy conflicts," says Hayat Alvi, lecturer in Middle Eastern politics at the U.S. Naval War College. "But unlike in the Cold War, there are now a much larger number of asymmetrical warfare techniques. Most of this is happening behind the scenes, but in the modern world we are finding it difficult to keep them secret for that long."

    Covert confrontation itself is, of course, nothing new. Foreign intelligence agencies have battled for decades to stop Iran and other states obtaining nuclear material, while Tehran and Israel have long needled each other and proxy battlegrounds, particularly in Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.

    IAEA: Iran not providing 'necessary cooperation' in nuclear probe

    The U.S. and Israel are widely suspected of using the Stuxnet computer worm to target Iranian nuclear centrifuges. Meanwhile, most experts believe Israel's Mossad was involved in assassinations of several nuclear scientists - attacks suspected to have prompted similar bomb attacks on Israeli diplomats in India, Georgia and Thailand and tourists in Bulgaria.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Hezbollah drone shot down
    But it does seem to be escalating. What Tehran is trying to do now, most analysts believe, is in part further retaliation. But its rulers may also be indicating that the Islamic Republic now has a range of new and potentially damaging options in reserve should its nuclear facilities be bombed.

    The penetration of Israeli airspace by an unmanned drone apparently operated by Lebanese militant group Hezbollah - a long-term Iranian ally - was, perhaps, one of the clearest examples so far.

    Hezbollah admits launching drone over Israel

    The drone was shot down by Israel's military in the vicinity of its main nuclear facility at Dimona.

    Iran has long been believed to be putting resources into a drone program and may have gathered useful tips after a classified U.S. Sentinel stealth drone came down in the country last year. While the Hezbollah drone was unarmed, a attack with multiple drones laden with explosives might prove harder to stop.

    The dramatic spike in suspected Iranian cyber attacks this year also has some in the U.S. distinctly worried. While direct denial of service attacks on U.S. banks - widely seen as retaliation for U.S. sanctions and attempts to freeze Iran from the international financial system - were seen relatively simplistic, attacks on U.S. allies in the Gulf were more complex.

    The most worrying, experts say, were those on Saudi oil firm Aramco and Qatari gas export facilities. Last month, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta described the Saudi attack as the most sophisticated yet launched on a private company, effectively destroying tens of thousands of computers - although he stopped short of blaming Tehran directly.

    In an attempt to convey what he sees as a threat to Israel's existence, Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu used a cartoon to illustrate how close he says Iran is to developing a nuclear weapon. In a speech at the United Nations General Assembly he asked the world to help stop them. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.

    Iranian officials have tended to deny involvement. But they say they have continued to come under cyber attack themselves with systems at Iran's own oil facilities, communications and infrastructure firms suffering problems last month.

    "The problem is that these are secret forms of warfare that are rarely, if ever, discussed publicly," a veteran former CIA official and now a senior fellow at the Brookings Institute told an event last month. "And yet the implications could be colossal. What do we do, for example, if it turns out the Iranians can shut down the entire Saudi oil production."

    Sending a message
    In the absence of direct face-to-face negotiations, such actions can also be a diplomatic tool in their own right.

    "The cyber attacks and Hezbollah drone both represent an escalation from the Iranian camp," says Ariel Ratner, a former Obama administration political appointees at the State Department and now fellow for the Truman National Security Foundation. "But a lot of what is going on here is a matter of signaling to each other."

    That might also in part explain a suspected Israeli airstrike on the outskirts of the Sudanese capital Khartoum on October 23 that caused a major fire at Sudan's Yarmouk arms factory.

    "Israel is flexing its muscles militarily and also sending a message to Tehran and Washington that it will not hesitate to use force to defend itself," says Bilal Saab, director of the Institute for near East and Gulf Military Analysis based in the United Arab Emirates and Washington D.C.. "It was a show of force meant to send political messages and achieve precise and immediate military objectives, those being the prevention of Iranian shipment of sensitive hardware to its proxies."

    Israel refused to comment after Sudanese officials said four of its aircraft conducted the attack. U.S. officials would not comment on what they believed happened, but spy agencies have long suspected Iran of smuggling weaponry into Eritrea and Sudan and across Egypt to Hamas militants in Gaza.

    Source: Back-channel talks but no US-Iran deal on one-to-one nuclear meeting

    Last week's four-day visit to Sudan by two Iranian warships - coming mere days after the arms factory attack - appeared an unusually public show of solidarity between two nations. Some suspect Israel is also raising its support for South Sudan, which gained its independence last year and has since teetered on the brink of conflict with Khartoum.

    Arab divisions
    The much more significant proxy confrontations, however, remain in the region itself. Israel is taking something of a back foot in the conflict in Syria - its officials saying any support they might give for anti-Assad rebels would be counter-productive - but Iran's Arab rivals are not.

    For Washington, rolling back Tehran's influence in Syria is seen as a distinctly secondary goal to stopping - or at least limiting - the bloodshed.

    For Saudi Arabia and Qatar, however, arming the rebels, the prospect of replacing the Shiite Alawite rule of Bashar al-Assad with a Sunni majority government with no Iranian links is seen as a key motivation.

    Slideshow: Everyday life in Iran

    At schools, in shops, and on the streets of big cities and small towns, daily life plays out in Iran.

    Launch slideshow

    The war there is already seen destabilizing neighboring Lebanon, while the body count in Iraq has also been creeping back up as violence between Sunni groups and sometimes Tehran-backed Shiites.

    The Sunni leadership of almost all of the Gulf states have long suspected Iran of stirring up dissent among their Shiite populations, although Western diplomats suspect such claims are overstated. Some worry Washington is already being dragged onto one side in a growing regional blood feud.

    Tehran may step up its attempts to destabilize neighbors, particularly if it believes its enemies are trying to do the same. Washington recently removed Iranian militant opposition group MEK from its list of terrorist groups, potentially opening the door to covert co-operation. To work with it on attacks within the country, however, might produce a violent response.

    Last year, U.S. officials said they had foiled an Iranian plot to kill the Saudi ambassador to Washington by bombing a restaurant in Washington DC. That, some security experts said, suggested Iran was increasingly willing to take serious risks - although others said the entire tale sounded too far-fetched.

    "It's very easy to look at these events and tie them together in some kind of straightforward narrative," says Henry Smith, Middle East analyst for London-based consultancy Control Risks. "But in reality, things are likely to be far more complex."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Analysis: From Afghanistan to Venezuela, 2012 battle captivates
    • Analysis: Despite bloodshed,White House candidates ignore Mexico
    • Analysis: US loses patience with Syria opposition group
    • Analysis: Suspicion of US rife as Romney, Obama batter China
    • Meet Afghan female rapper, colonel who defy the odds
    • Analysis: Israel, Iran name checks illustrate America's twin obsessions
    • Chinese say one child is enough as Beijing weighs end of policy
    • Analysis: Should next US president treat Russia as friend or foe?
    • Expert: Tourists threaten Sistine Chapel's famous paintings

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    73 comments

    This is becoming another bunch of jokes just as before Iraqi wars! It is mainly Shiites vs Sunni battles! Not a Cold War! Syria and Iran are simply Islamic religious battles and not ideological battles. Hope people have learnt lessons from Iraqi wars, Afghan war, Libya and other places. For a change …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: us, featured, iran, israel, syria, sudan, covert, cyber-war
  • 24
    Oct
    2012
    5:53pm, EDT

    Sudan says Israeli jets bombed arms factory

    EPA

    A picture made available on Oct. 24, 2012 shows a fire following an explosion at Yarmouk military factory in Khartoum, Sudan. The fire has been contained, but it is still unclear what triggered the explosion.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Sudan on Wednesday blamed Israel for a huge explosion and fire at an arms factory in Khartoum that killed two people. Israel's defense minister declined to comment.

    "Four military planes attacked the Yarmouk plant. ... We believe that Israel is behind it," Sudan Information Minister Ahmed Belal Osman told reporters, adding that the planes appeared to approach the site from the east.

    Asked by Israel's Channel Two News about Sudan's accusations, Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak said: "There is nothing I can say about this subject."


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Similarly, U.S. officials who spoke with NBC News on condition of anonymity, said, "We have no comment. We can’t help you on this.”

    Some Pentagon officials suggested that the explosion could have been accidental and said there were “conflicting reports” about its cause.


    Sudan, which analysts say is used as an arms-smuggling route to the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip via neighboring Egypt, has blamed Israel for similar blasts in the past, but Israel either has refused to comment or said it neither admitted or denied involvement.

    The powerful explosion at the Yarmouk Military Industrial Complex in southern Khartoum rocked Sudan's capital before dawn Wednesday, sending detonating ammunition flying through the air and causing panic, Sudan's official news agency and local media reports said. Nearby buildings were damaged by the blast, their roofs blown off and their windows shattered, according to the reports.

    New fighting in Sudan's Darfur region, several killed

    "Sudan reserves the right to strike back at Israel," Osman said, saying two citizens had been killed and that the plant had been partially destroyed. Another person was seriously injured, he added.

    Officials said earlier there were no reports of deaths, although some residents had suffered from smoke inhalation.

    Around 300 people gathered in the evening at the courtyard of a government building where the Sudanese Cabinet was meeting in an emergency session, shouting "Death to Israel" and "Remove Israel from the map."

    Conflict displaces 900,000 in Sudan border areas

    "Israel is a country of injustice that needs to be deterred," Vice President Ali Osman Taha, standing next to President Omar Hassan al-Bashir, told the crowd. "This attack only strengthens our firmness."

    The governor of Khartoum state initially had ruled out any "external" cause for the blast, but officials later showed journalists a video from the vast site showing a huge crater next to two destroyed buildings and what appeared to be a rocket lying on the ground.

    Sudan forces burned, looted remote border village: activists

    Osman said an analysis of rocket debris and other material had shown that the attack had been engineered by Israel, which Sudan views as an enemy.

    Defense Minister Gen. Abdul Rahim Mohamed Hussein and senior officials visited the site of the explosion and held an emergency meeting with top army generals while security forces sealed off the area surrounding the complex and halted traffic.

    Israel kills 3 Hamas militants after Qatari emir leaves Gaza

    In 2009, a convoy carrying weapons in northeastern Sudan was targeted from the air, killing dozens. It was widely believed that Israel carried out the attack on weapons shipment headed for Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip. Israel never confirmed or denied that. Sudanese parliamentarians denied that weapons were transported in the area.

    In 1998, the United States used cruise missiles to knock out a Khartoum pharmaceutical factory suspected of links to al-Qaida in the aftermath of the terror group's bombings of U.S. embassies in Kenya and Tanzania that killed 224 people.

    Sudan has long been a major hub for al-Qaida militants and a transit for weapon smugglers and African migrant traffickers.

    NBC News' Senior Investigative Producer Robert Windrem, the Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Top 10 foreign policy issues facing a new president
    • Syria agrees to ceasefire during Eid holiday, says mediator
    • 'The new Afghanistan'? West turns its attention to Mali
    • BBC ripped for handling of sex abuse scandal tied to former host
    • Castro: I'm so healthy I don't 'even remember what a headache is'
    • Hate crimes increase, extreme right strengthens as Greece economy sinks
    • Source: No deal yet on US-Iran nuclear talks
    • Newlywed Afghan beheaded for her refusal to become prostitute

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    167 comments

    Israel didn't do this. How do I know? Because the factory was only damaged, not destroyed. It was likely an industrial accident, and Jews are always a great scapegoat for the blame.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, israel, sudan, al-qaida, blast, yarmouk
  • 2
    Oct
    2012
    7:05am, EDT

    UN: Syria pushes global refugee count toward 21st-century record

    Manu Brabo / AP

    Rada Hallabi, 4, who is sick with diabetes, lies on a blanket in a refugee camp on the border with Turkey, near Azaz village, Syria, Sunday.

    By Reuters

    GENEVA -- With tens of thousands fleeing Syria every month, the number of refugees worldwide in 2012 is set to be the highest this century, according to a senior United Nations official.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Antonio Guterres, the body's High Commissioner for Refugees, told his UNHCR agency's executive committee Monday that its ability to cope was being stretched to the limit.

    "Already in 2011, as crisis after crisis unfolded, more than 800,000 people crossed borders in search of refuge -- an average of more than 2,000 refugees every day," the former Portuguese prime minister said.

    That total had been the highest since the turn of the century "and so far this year more than 700,000 people have fled from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Mali, Sudan and Syria", Guterres said.

    Syria's foreign minister says US, allies support 'terrorism'

    Last Friday, another UNHCR official said the total from Syria could reach 700,000 this year, nearly four times its earlier estimate as government troops battle rebels across the country.

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    Manu Brabo / AP

    A look back at the violence that has overtaken the country

    Launch slideshow

    'Cause for deep concern'
    About 294,000 refugees fleeing 18 months of fighting have already crossed into Jordan, Iraq, Lebanon and Turkey, or await registration there, Panos Moumtzis told a news briefing.

    He said 100,000 people had fled Syria in August, 60,000 in September and at the moment 2,000 or 3,000 were crossing daily into neighboring countries.

    'Overwhelmed' aid agencies seek $340M to help refugees flooding out of Syria

    The new refugees are joining some 42 million around the globe who have fled across borders to escape violence. Many of these have been in temporary shelter provided by the UNHCR for a decade or more, some for even longer.

    Amid the global economic crisis and with budgets of governments stretched, Guterres told the executive committee that the cost of helping refugees was escalating fast while long-lasting crises like Afghanistan and Somalia continued.

    'Senseless' torture: Charity appeals for help for Syria's kids

    "We are at a moment when the demands on us are rising while the means available to respond have remained at a similar level to last year," he said.

    "Our operations in Africa, in particular, are dramatically underfunded. At this moment, we have no room for unforeseen needs, no reserves available. In today's unpredictable operating environment, this is a cause for deep concern,” he added.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Hong Kong ferry collision kills 25
    • Two female tourists freed after Ecuador kidnap ordeal
    • Colonial sins return to haunt former world powers
    • Death threats force Afghan actress into hiding
    • Experts: Four leopards being killed each week for skins in India
    • In Iran, sanctions bite and currency collapses
    • Trial of pope's ex-butler over leaked papers begins
    • Stay informed: Sign up for our newsletter

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    7 comments

    This cannot be. There are no "refugees" in the world other than Palestinians. No other cause matters. Clearly the UN people who are making up these stories are tools of the Zionist occupiers trying to divert attention from the only problem that matters in the world! ;-))

    Show more
    Explore related topics: syria, united-nations, sudan, refugees, congo, mali, unhcr, antonio-guterres
  • 15
    Sep
    2012
    2:41pm, EDT

    Sudan rejects addition of Marines at US Embassy

    The U.S. has deployed an FBI investigation team and drones to Libya to search for those responsible for the murder of the U.S. ambassador and three other Americans. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Updated at 4:15 p.m. ET:KHARTOUM -- Sudan has rejected a U.S. request to send a platoon of Marines to bolster security at the U.S. embassy outside Khartoum, the state news agency SUNA said on Saturday.

    The U.S. ordered all family members and non-emergency personnel out of Khartoum as well as Tunis, Tunisia, posts, State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland said Saturday afternoon. The State Department also issued travel warnings to U.S. citizens in both countries.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    Earlier Saturday, a U.S. official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the official was not authorized to disclose details on the troop movement, said Sudan's objection held up the deployment of 50 Marines. A U.S. official said the Marines had already set off for Khartoum but had been called back pending further discussions with Sudan.

    Nuland earlier Saturday didn't speak about the Marines but acknowledged Sudan had "recommitted itself both publicly and privately to continue to protect our Mission, as it is obligated to do under the Vienna Convention."

    "We are continuing to monitor the situation closely to ensure we have what we need to protect our people and facility," Nuland said.


    AFP - Getty Images

    Smoke billows from the US embassy in the Sudanese capital Khartoum on Friday during a protest against an amateur film mocking Islam.

    On Friday, around 5,000 people protested against a film that insults the Prophet Muhammad, storming the German embassy before breaking into the U.S. mission.

    They also attacked the British embassy. At least two people were killed in clashes with police, according to state media.

    In Tunis, four people were killed and 46 were wounded, the Tunisian government said, after police gunfire near the U.S. Embassy in the North African city that was the model for last year's pro-democracy revolutions.

    Police fought hundreds of protesters who smashed windows, hurled petrol bombs and stones at police from inside, and started fires in the embassy and to a gym and a neighboring American school. A Reuters reporter saw police open fire on protesters forcing their way into the embassy building.

    A U.S. official told Reuters on Friday that Washington would send Marines to Sudan to improve security at the embassy located outside Khartoum.

    Related:

    • At least 7 reported killed in protests over anti-Islamic video
    • Two US troops killed at Afghan camp where Prince Harry is based
    • Obama: US has 'profound respect for people of all faiths'
    • Suspected anti-Islam filmmaker questioned by Feds

    "Sudan is able to protect the diplomatic missions in Khartoum and the state is committed to protecting its guests in the diplomatic corps," Sudanese Foreign Minister Ali Ahmed Karti told SUNA.

    The violent protests in response to an anti-Islamic film have been spreading across the Middle East and the North Africa region, with attention focused on U.S. embassies and offices. NBC News' Jim Maceda reports.

    Sudan beefed up security at some missions on Saturday. A riot police truck was parked in front of the deserted German embassy, which protesters had set on fire on Friday. An Islamic flag raised by the crowd was still flying. Three officers manned the main gate.

    More than 20 police officers were sitting in front of the U.S. Embassy.

    The film, which depicts Muhammad as a womanizer and charlatan, was made in the United States, and Muslim outrage has led to crowds assaulting U.S. diplomatic missions in a number of Arab countries.

    U.S. authorities are interviewing a California man suspected of making an anti-Islamic film that has sparked violent protests across the Middle East.

    Sudan has also criticized Germany for allowing a protest last month by right-wing activists carrying caricatures of Muhammad, and for Chancellor Angela Merkel's award in 2010 to a Danish cartoonist who had depicted the prophet, triggering unrest across the Islamic world.

    President Omar Hassan al-Bashir has been under pressure from Islamists who feel the government has given up the religious values of his 1989 Islamist coup.

    The Sudanese government had called for protests against the film, but peaceful ones. President Barack Obama's administration said it had nothing to do with the movie, which is little more than an amateurish video clip and appears to have been made in California.

    This article includes reporting by NBC News' Catherine Chomiak, Reuters and The Associated Press.

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Clashes after South Africa cops raid miners' hostels to seize weapons
    • Spirits with more than 20 percent alcohol banned in Czech Republic
    • Lebanese hope pope can 'bring peace' to the region
    • NBC's Jim Maceda answers questions about the Mideast protests
    • 'Super typhoon' heading for Okinawa, South Korea
    • Photos: It's already Christmas for factories in China

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    469 comments

    OK, just close the US embassy and send all of our personnel back home. It is time for a reality check in our State Department.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: video, featured, islam, protests, sudan, embassy, prophet, muhammad, khartoum
  • 21
    Aug
    2012
    3:56am, EDT

    Ethiopia prime minister and Africa strongman Meles Zenawi dies

    Cris Bouroncle / AFP - Getty Images, file

    A file picture taken in 2009 shows Meles Zenawi at the 9th Summit of the African Peer Review Forum (APRF) in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt.

    By Alastair Jamieson, NBC News, and wire reports

    Updated at 5:54 a.m. ET: Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, a senior Africa figurehead, died of an infection while being treated abroad for an undisclosed illness, state-run television said on Tuesday.

    Speculation that Meles, 57, was seriously ill grew after he failed to attend an African Union summit in the Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa last month.

    "Prime Minister Zenawi suddenly passed away last night. Meles was recovering in a hospital overseas for the past two months but died of a sudden infection at 11:40 (on Monday night, or 4:40 p.m. ET)," state television said.


    Hailemariam Dessalegne, the deputy prime minister, was expected to be sworn in early Tuesday, according to the Twitter account of the Addis Fortune newspaper in Addis Ababa.

    "Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam Dessalegne will sworn in Parliament soon." Bereket #Ethiopia #MelesZenawi

    — Addis fortune (@addis_fortune) August 21, 2012

    Meles, who led the Horn of Africa country for more than two decades, was born into a middle-class family but dropped out of university to join an armed insurrection led by the Tigray People's Liberation Front (TPLF), according to a BBC obituary.

    Meles seized power in 1991 from Mengistu Haile Mariam's military junta. As president and then prime minister he turned Ethiopia into a key player in regional security affairs.

    His forces, widely regarded as among the strongest on the continent, have entered Somalia twice to battle Islamist militants, winning him accolades from the West for supporting its fight against al-Qaida-linked groups.

    Unspecified condition
    Ethiopia's government said last month that Meles was taking a break to recover from an unspecified condition. Diplomats in Addis Ababa had said Meles was being treated in Brussels for an undisclosed illness, while others said he was in Germany.

    Somali Islamist militants hailed Meles' death as a "historic day" and said Ethiopia, which has troops inside Somalia, would now crumble. 

    "We are very glad about Meles' death. Ethiopia is sure to collapse," Sheikh Ali Mohamud Rage, the spokesman for Al Shabaab told Reuters. Meles twice rolled his troops across the border to help crush Islamist insurgencies. 

    Kenya's Prime Minister Raila Odinga told the BBC he feared for the stability of Ethiopia following Meles' death, citing the continued threat of ethnic violence.

    In an Aug. 16 post on the Think Africa Press blog, entitled Ethiopia: What Might a Post-Meles Era Bring?, Yohannes Woldemariam wrote: "The stability of Ethiopia's regime is anchored on the strength of its military, support from the U.S., and the individual intelligence and charisma of Meles."

    During his time in office Meles was credited with steering Ethiopia towards economic growth and also helped mediate in several regional disputes, including rifts between Sudan and South Sudan.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    "I believe that any successor to Meles will focus first on domestic issues and for the most part leave the regional and international engagement to other countries, at least until the new leader is firmly established in office," David Shinn, former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia, told Reuters recently.

    "For internal security reasons, there will be a continuing focus on Somalia and I do not foresee any significant change towards Eritrea," he said, referring to Ethiopia's arch-foe with whom it fought a decade-long border war.

    But Ethiopia would be less willing to devote a lot of time and resources to problems further afield, Shinn said.

    However, international rights groups say Meles was intolerant of dissent. Several opposition figures and journalists have been arrested under a 2009 anti-terrorism law.

    State television said details of his funeral would be announced soon, the Horn of Africa country's first state burial in modern times.

    Emperor Haile Selassie was laid to rest in 2000, 26 years after he was deposed. His body was found decades later beneath a palace lavatory in what forensic experts said were signs he had been murdered.

    Another deposed leader, Mengistu Haile Mariam lives in exile in Zimbabwe.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Wife of disgraced Chinese leader gets death sentence with reprieve
    • Russian top clerics forgive Pussy Riot, ask for mercy
    • With wife's conviction, what is next for China's Bo Xilai?
    • Assange in balcony appeal: Release Bradley Manning
    • Czech police accuse man of plotting Norway-like copycat terrorist attack
    • Government minister among 32 killed as Sudanese helicopter crashes into mountain
    • Video: Chaos follows Syrian airstrikes
    • Tropical Storm Helene slams Mexico; Hurricane Gordon heads for Azores

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook


    38 comments

    Meles has been a loyal servant of rhe USA for the last 20 years. For such a loyal servant, the USA has been providing an economic, political and diplomatic support and cover up for the crime committed against the people of Ethiopia. If there is "no significant change towards Eritrea", it is because  …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, somalia, featured, sudan, kenya, ethiopia, meles-zenawi
  • 19
    Aug
    2012
    6:00am, EDT

    Government minister among 32 people killed as Sudanese helicopter crashes into mountain in bad weather

    By NBC News staff

    Updated at 11 a.m. ET: Bad weather was blamed for the crash of a chartered helicopter Sunday in southern Sudan, which killed all 32 people aboard, including several prominent government and political leaders.

    The helicopter was carrying a government delegation to South Kordofan state for prayers on the first day of Eid al-Fitr, the festival marking the end of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, when it crashed into Hajar al-Nar, a mountain near the town of Talodi, said the official Sudanese news agency, SUNA. 



    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    SUNA reported that the victims included Ghazi al-Saddiq, the minister of Guidance and Endowments — the equivalent of the religion ministry — Maki Ali Balayli, chairman of Sudan's Peace and Justice Party, and several other government, security and media figures. 

    Initial reports had speculated that the Sudan People's Liberation Movement North, the main rebel group in the violent region, might have attacked the helicopter, but rebels denied any involvement, and the government later said the crash was "due to bad weather."

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Russian top clerics forgive Pussy Riot, ask for mercy
    • Tropical Storm Helene slams Mexico; Hurricane Gordon heads for Azores
    • Video: Chaos follows Syrian airstrikes
    • Could teddy bears unsettle 'Europe's last dictator'?
    • Report: 211 die during drugs trials in India

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    56 comments

    The article presents absolutely no information surrounding the crash: type of aircraft, day/night, weather conditions, crew qualifications, fuel status, yet begins to assign blame to the UNITED STATES because Sudan Airways "has been worn down by years of U.S. sanctions..." Why not blame Isaac Newt …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, featured, aviation, sudan, plane-crash
  • 4
    Aug
    2012
    11:44am, EDT

    South Sudan strikes deal with Sudan to export oil through pipelines

    By NBC News and wire services

    Jenny Vaughan / AFP - Getty Images

    African Union lead mediator Thabo Mbeki speaks in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, on Saturday to announce that Sudan and South Sudan have reached an agreement on how to share the oil riches controlled by Khartoum.

    Landlocked South Sudan said it has a struck a deal with Sudan over oil exports through Sudan's pipelines, but the agreement won't go into effect until border issues are resolved, Khartoum officials said.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    In a statement Saturday, South Sudan's government said that it will pay approximately $9.48 a barrel to transport its fuel through Sudan's pipelines.

    The White House praised the deal and encouraged agreement on humanitarian issues as well.


    South Sudan says the agreement on pipeline transportation fees will last for three and a half years, after which the countries may negotiate lower rates or South Sudan, which expects to have constructed a pipeline through Kenya, will stop using Sudan's pipeline.

    A row over the sharing of the two countries' once-unified oil industry prompted South Sudan to shut down its 350,000-thousand-barrel-a-day oil production. Oil also sparked a dangerous military confrontation between the two sides in April, when South Sudan captured the disputed town of Heglig, which is responsible for more than half of Sudan's oil production.

    The U.N. Security Council had given the African neighbors until Thursday to resolve all conflicts left over from South Sudan's secession a year ago under a 2005 peace agreement.

    Watch World News videos on NBCNews.com

    U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who on Friday urged the two nations to resolve bitter disputes that earlier this year pushed the countries to the brink of war, welcomed announcement of the oil pact.

    “This agreement reflects leadership and a new spirit of compromise on both sides,” she said in a prepared statement obtained by NBC News.

    “As I said in Juba yesterday, the interests of their people were at stake. … The future of South Sudan is now brighter.”

    "For Sudan, too, this agreement offers a way out of the extreme economic stress it is now experiencing,” Clinton said. “If Sudan would now also take the steps to peace in Southern Kordofan, Blue Nile and Darfur, and if it will respect the rights of all citizens, it can likewise give its people a brighter future.”

    Stay informed with the latest headlines; sign up for our newsletter 

    Clinton is on an 11-day tour of Africa.

    President Barack Obama, in a White House statement obtained by NBC News, said, "The leaders of Sudan and South Sudan deserve congratulations for reaching agreement and finding compromise on such an important issue, and I applaud the efforts of the international community which came together to encourage and support the parties in finding a resolution. ... I am also encouraged by the announcement of a possible agreement on humanitarian access to Southern Kordofan and Blue Nile, and urge the immediate implementation of this agreement to provide urgently needed humanitarian assistance to people in these areas."

    The oil deal was announced in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, where African Union mediator Thabo Mbeki said, "It's an (oil) agreement about all of the matters. The issues that were outstanding were charges for transportation, for processing, transit," Mbeki, the former South African president, told reporters.

    "What will remain (now)...is to then discuss the steps as to when the oil companies should be asked to prepare for the resumption of production and export," Mbeki said.

    He gave no time frame, saying only the parties had until Sept. 22 to resolve border security and other conflicts.

    The two sides, deeply mistrustful of each other, have often not implemented previous agreements and still need to mark their 1,200-mile border and resolve charges both have made of supporting rebels in the other’s territory.

    This article includes reporting by Reuters and The Associated Press.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • UN General Assembly condemns Syrian regime; Russia and China balk
    • Cholera threatens displaced Congolese
    • Belarus, Sweden kick out ambassadors as teddy bear war heats up
    • Reuters confirms hackers posted fake Syria news story on its service
    • Olympic hosts: Londoners open their homes to the world
    • President: Mexico gang-related deaths fall by 15 percent in 2012
    • Baby elephant orphaned in slaughter finds a foster mom
    • Images: The lives of Syrian rebels fighting for freedom

    10 comments

    For decades the conflicts within Sudan are about oil in the southern Sudan region. As hundreds of billions of barrel of oil have been discovered in the shallow oil fields of southern Sudan, the money hungry Arabs are drawn to southern Sudan as if it were a second Mecca.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: africa, oil, hillary-clinton, sudan, pipeline, south-sudan
  • 1
    Aug
    2012
    4:52am, EDT

    US: Deaths of Osama bin Laden, other top figures put al-Qaida on 'path of decline'

    One year ago, U.S. Navy SEALs launched a nighttime raid on a compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, and killed former al-Qaida chief Osama bin Laden. NBC's Amna Nawaz reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    WASHINGTON -- Osama bin Laden's death sent al-Qaida into a decline that will be hard to reverse, the United States said on Tuesday in a report that found terrorist attacks last year fell to their lowest level since 2005.

    Describing 2011 as a "landmark year," the United States said other top al-Qaida members killed last year included Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, reportedly the militant organization's No. 2 figure after bin Laden's death, and Anwar al-Awlaki, who led its lethal affiliate in Yemen.

    "The loss of bin Laden and these other key operatives puts the network on a path of decline that will be difficult to reverse," the State Department said in its annual "Country Reports on Terrorism" document, which covers calendar year 2011.


    The report attributed the killings, which included the May 2011 raid in which U.S. commandos shot bin Laden in Pakistan, to improved cooperation on counterterrorism. But it also said al-Qaida is adaptable and poses "an enduring and serious threat."

    Slideshow: After the raid: Inside bin Laden's compound

    Farooq Naeem / AFP - Getty Images

    U.S. forces found and killed the al-Qaida leader in the affluent Pakistani town of Abbottabad, where he had been living in a large compound.

    Launch slideshow

    While saying there were no terrorist attacks in the United States last year, the report asserted that the U.S. government remains concerned about "threats to the homeland," citing the foiled 2009 Christmas Day attempt by the Nigerian "underwear bomber" who sought to blow up a Detroit-bound aircraft.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The report included a statistical annex prepared by the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) that showed the overall number of terrorist attacks worldwide fell to 10,283 last year from 11,641 in 2010.

    Panetta: Only a 'small handful' of top al-Qaida targets left

    The number of worldwide fatalities fell to 12,533 last year from 13,193 the year before, according to the statistics, which NCTC issued in a report published on June 1.

    That was the lowest level since 2005, when there were more than 11,000 attacks and more than 14,000 fatalities. The general decline in terrorism-related fatalities -- which peaked at more than 22,000 in 2007 -- reflects, in part, less violence in Iraq.

    The report added: 

    Sunni extremists accounted for the greatest number of terrorist attacks and fatalities for the third consecutive year. More than 5,700 incidents were attributed to Sunni extremists, accounting for nearly 56 percent of all attacks and about 70 percent of all fatalities ... Secular, political, and anarchist groups were the next largest category of perpetrators, conducting 2,283 attacks with 1,926 fatalities, a drop of 5 percent and 9 percent, respectively, from 2010.

    The State Department report said that as al-Qaida's "core has gotten weaker," affiliated groups have gained ground, citing al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula as a particular threat and voicing concern about al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb.

    Slideshow: World reacts to death of Osama bin Laden

    Arshad Butt / AP

    Osama bin Laden is dead following a military operation in Pakistan and the US has recovered his body, US President Barack Obama announced Sunday night.

    Launch slideshow

    It also reported an increase in terrorist attacks in Africa, due largely to Nigeria's Boko Haram militant group, as well as in the Western Hemisphere, which it attributed chiefly to FARC insurgents in Colombia.

    Daniel Benjamin, the State Department's coordinator for counterterrorism, said last year was also significant for the "Arab Spring" of popular protests and what he described as its rebuff to al-Qaida's ideology.

    "We saw millions of citizens throughout the Middle East advance peaceful public demands for change without any reference to al-Qaida's incendiary world view," he said, adding that upheavals also present risks.

    "Revolutionary transformations have many bumps in the road," he added. "Inspiring as the moment may be, we are not blind to the attendant perils."

    U.S. counterterror officials say that after years of drone strikes and other activities against the leaders of Al Qaida, the group is no longer able to pull off a major attack against U.S. interests, such as 9/11. NBC's Mike Viqueira reports.

    The report cites Cuba, Iran, Sudan and Syria as state sponsors of terrorism.

    It added: 

    Al-Qaida and its affiliates and adherents are far from the only terrorist threat the United States faces. Iran, the world’s leading state sponsor of terrorism, continues to undermine international efforts to promote peace and democracy and threatens stability, especially in the Middle East and South Asia. Its use of terrorism as an instrument of policy was exemplified by the involvement of elements of the Iranian regime in the plot to assassinate the Saudi Ambassador in Washington, a conspiracy that the international community strongly condemned through a UN General Assembly resolution in November.

    It highlighted that Syria was "mired in significant civil unrest for most of 2011" but "continued its strong partnership" with Iran.

    The report added:

    Syria has laws on the books pertaining to counterterrorism and terrorist financing, but it largely used these legal instruments against opponents of the regime, including political protesters and other members of the growing oppositionist movement.

    The State Department also highlighted other forms of violent extremism around the world -- including attacks by the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) that killed at least 88 people; anarchists in Greece and Italy targeting government offices, foreign missions and symbols of the state; as well as dissident Republican groups in Northern Ireland.

    The National Counterterrorism Center's annex also highlighted:

    • Attacks on government facilities decreased by about 43 percent from 2010, from 796 attacks to 453 attacks in 2011.
    • There was a sharp increase in the number of attacks directed at energy infrastructure, including fuel tankers, fuel pipelines and electrical networks, rising from 299 attacks in 2010 to 438 attacks in 2011.
    • The number of attacks directed at public places declined in each of the past five years, from a high of 4,121 attacks in 2007 to 2,186 attacks in 2011.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • US: Leaders' deaths put al-Qaida on 'path of decline'
    • Good, bad or ugly? Street artists weigh in on Olympics
    • Video: Syrian rebels obtain anti-aircraft missiles
    • Video: 'Blitz Spirit' lives on in London's East End
    • Greenland again sees widespread ice melt
    • Fugitive anti-whaling activist says ex-crewman betrayed him
    • Teen arrested after Olympian gets Twitter death threat
    • Rome's leaning Colosseum has experts worried

     

     

    491 comments

    Unfortunately - The US is also on a path of decline. LMFAO - Yea that was a great shot Obama took. Why is it Obama takse credit for this but blames Bush for everything else?? FYI - I voted for Obama .. not proud of it now ... but I did.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, iran, terrorism, syria, cuba, sudan, osama-bin-laden, state-department, al-qaida
Older posts

Browse

  • featured,
  • world-news,
  • syria,
  • china,
  • europe,
  • afghanistan,
  • world,
  • middle-east,
  • israel,
  • updated,
  • iran,
  • pakistan,
  • egypt,
  • russia,
  • uk,
  • north-korea,
  • london,
  • africa,
  • military,
  • assad,
  • protest,
  • france,
  • environment,
  • al-qaida,
  • taliban,
  • britain,
  • nuclear,
  • italy,
  • india,
  • terrorism,
  • germany,
  • asia,
  • vatican,
  • japan,
  • south-africa,
  • mexico,
  • economy,
  • turkey,
  • human-rights,
  • crime,
  • pope
Also
Advertise | AdChoices

Archives

  • 2013
    • June (183)
    • May (258)
    • April (275)
    • March (432)
    • February (332)
    • January (323)
  • 2012
    • December (332)
    • November (332)
    • October (313)
    • September (360)
    • August (362)
    • July (310)
    • June (351)
    • May (427)
    • April (404)
    • March (427)
    • February (347)
    • January (284)
  • 2011
    • December (357)
    • November (3)

Most Commented

  • US offers Syrian rebels 'military support,' alleges Assad used chemical weapons (1741)
  • 98-year-old charged with 'unlawful execution, torture' of Jews during World War II (984)
  • Obama announces extra $300 million in aid for Syrians, refugees (692)
  • Obama and Putin cite differences on Syria but say they want violence to end (787)
  • US, Taliban to meet in Qatar for 'key milestone' toward ending Afghanistan war (727)
  • US military officials say help for Syria likely to escalate gradually (360)
  • Moderate cleric Hasan Rowhani elected president of Iran, interior ministry says (424)

Other blogs

  • Cosmic Log
  • Red Tape Chronicles
  • PhotoBlog
  • US News
  • Open Channel

NBCNews.com top stories

3147,10
© 2013 NBCNews.com
  • World news on NBCNews.com
  • About us
  • Contact
  • Help
  • Site map
  • Careers
  • Closed captioning
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Advertise