Strict traditions
New direction
https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/30/asia/new-japan-emperor-naruhito-intl/index.html
2019-04-30 07:04:00Z
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BEIRUT, Lebanon — The Islamic State released a video on Monday of a man it said was Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the group’s mysterious and reclusive leader, which would mark the first time he has showed his face while addressing his followers since the early days of the terrorist group’s rampage through Iraq and Syria.
In an 18-minute video released by an Islamic State media group and distributed by the SITE Intelligence Group, the man identified as Mr. al-Baghdadi sits on the ground in an Arab-style sitting room, speaking calmly to a group of unidentified followers with an assault rifle at his side.
He acknowledges that the group has lost its so-called caliphate in Iraq and Syria, a territory the size of Britain that it ruled as an extremist proto-state. But he said that the group’s battle with the West and its allies was far from over.
[Read about how ISIS lost Baghuz.]
“Truthfully, the battle of Islam and its people with the crusader and his people is a long battle, and the battle of Baghuz finished and manifested in it was the brutality and savagery of the nation of the cross toward the nation of Islam,” the man said, his beard grayer than when he addressed his followers from a mosque in the Iraqi city of Mosul when the group was near the summit of its power. “At the same time, it showed and manifested the courage, fortitude and persistence of the nation of Islam.”
According to SITE, the video was the first time Mr. al-Baghdadi has been shown in a video since July 2014, when he gave a sermon in Mosul.
In the video, SITE says, he praises the attackers who carried out the bombing attacks in Sri Lanka last week, saying they were revenge for the loss of Baghuz, the Islamic State’s last territory in Syria, which it lost to American-backed forces a month ago.
[Where ISIS ruled in Syria, fear and uncertainty still reign.]
The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the Sri Lanka attacks, which killed at least 250 people.
While Mr. al-Baghdadi has not been seen in several years, he has been heard from. Last August, the Islamic State released an audio recording said to be of him.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
Huda, a 60-year-old high school teacher in Tripoli, has just finished her last day teaching English literature at an international school in the Libyan capital. Speaking by phone from her now-empty classroom, she tells NPR the school year had to wrap up early because of the intensity of fighting between pro- and anti-government forces.
Exams were interrupted by sounds of shelling and nearby explosions. Some of her students screamed in fear, but many, she says, were not afraid. They are children of war, she explains. They were eight or nine years old when Libya's 2011 revolution took place, and they've become desensitized to the bombs.
"Us adults are more afraid," Huda says. She does not want her surname used due to safety concerns. "I've been living my life not on a day-to-day basis, but on a minute-per-minute basis. Between getting into my car, driving to work, and coming home, I don't know where I will be the next minute — dead or alive."
On April 4, Khalifa Haftar, the 75-year-old renegade military leader who has controlled much of eastern Libya since 2015, launched an attack to seize Tripoli from the United Nations-recognized government of Prime Minister Fayez Sarraj.
The U.N. has reported "indiscriminate shelling of civilian areas in Tripoli." Rockets and mortar shells are hitting heavily populated neighborhoods on a nearly daily basis, according to civilians who spoke with NPR. They also report drones hovering in the skies, and air strikes.
Libya has struggled for stability since the overthrow of Moammar Gadhafi in 2011. Sarraj's government came to power in 2016, following a series of U.N. dialogues, but Haftar and his allied militias have refused to acknowledge it. The government includes a loose collection of militias, each controlling a different part of the country. There is no national military force.
Haftar and the militias allied with him claim that Tripoli is run by terrorists, gangs and extremist militias, and say therefore he must lead a fight for liberation.
Since April 4, hundreds of people have gathered in Tripoli's central Martyrs Square to protest Haftar and his rhetoric.
"This is so dangerous, because he views us all as terrorists. We are not terrorists, and we are fighting for our lives. If he comes in, it will truly be a massacre. This is how people in the streets feel," Amina, a friend of Huda's, tells NPR. Amina, whose fears for safety mean she does not want her surname to be used, runs an import company with her children.
The U.N. Migration Agency reports that over 39,000 residents of Tripoli have been forced to evacuate their houses and move to other, safer areas.
Over the past few weeks, Huda says she has "attended too many funerals." She tells NPR that people in Tripoli are trying go about their daily lives as usual, attending tea parties, running errands, planning weddings. But once they hear the sound of bombs, she says, they have no place to run.
"Most people in Tripoli don't have any basements," she says, "so our houses start shaking, my grandkids start to cry and I just feel helpless. I become numb. Random shelling is something that I don't want even an enemy to go through."
The Tripoli office head of the International Committee of the Red Cross said April 25 that "densely populated residential areas are gradually turning into battlefields." Fighting has killed at least 264 people and injured over 1,200 others, according to a World Health Organization spokesperson.
Although Libya is an oil-rich country, the political divisions have helped create what feels like a "never-ending" cash crisis, Tripoli residents tell NPR.
There are long lines at banks, and people find it almost impossible to withdraw money from ATMs, which residents say have almost become "decorative" around the capital. The banks are run and controlled by the Libyan Central Bank and are secured by different militias.
"We are limited to hard currency to only $500 or $1,000 per year," Amina says.
Huda says she isn't allowed to see how much money she has in the bank. "We are given these debit cards with limits on them from the banks and we cannot go over," she says. "That's how we're living at the moment."
The lack of stability in the country and high inflation rates helped lead to a collapse in deposits.
"The banks had a cash problem because the people didn't want to use them and they ran out of cash," Amina says. "People were playing the black market and became very rich doing so, at the expense of the economy."
The U.N. envoy for Libya has warned against an attempted power grab by Haftar. But the general has support from regional powers, including the United Arab Emirates and Egypt. A U.N. panel of experts' report from 2017 claims that the UAE has been violating an arms embargo and gave Haftar's troops aircraft and military vehicles, and also helped build an air base at al-Khadim in northeastern Libya.
Earlier this month, General Abdel-Salam al-Hassi, a spokesman for Haftar, said that allied countries have been conducting "friendly air raids" against forces loyal to Sarraj's internationally recognized government in Tripoli.
On April 7, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the U.S. opposed Haftar's attacks. "We have made clear that we oppose the military offensive by Khalifa Haftar's forces and urge the immediate halt to these military operations against the Libyan capital," he said.
But in a subsequent phone call with Haftar, President Trump "recognized Field Marshal Haftar's significant role in fighting terrorism and securing Libya's oil resources, and the two discussed a shared vision for Libya's transition to a stable, democratic political system," according to a White House statement.
The Tripoli government accuses France of supporting Haftar, and has stopped all cooperation with Paris. France denies these accusations, but halted an EU call to stop Haftar's offensive in Libya.
The U.N. has been trying to lead reconciliation talks between Sarraj and Haftar, attempting to create a single unity government. Some analysts have questioned how effective the talks can be, given that they have been hosted by the UAE.
"The U.N. should not have allowed for a political dialogue and deal to be conducted through the UAE," says Anas El Gomati, general director of the Sadeq Institute, a Libyan think tank. The UAE, he says, "can't possibly support the military state-building ambitions of Haftar and the civilian state aspired to by Sarraj. This should've been held in neutral ground."
Gomati says many Libyans simply don't trust Haftar because of his 50-year track record as a "serial defector."
"In 1969, he defected from the King of Libya to Moammar Gadhafi," he says. "He then defected again during the battle against Chad, where he went to Langley, Virginia, and allegedly worked with the CIA for at least 20 years, and in the meantime, joined a Libyan opposition group. He defected from one opposition and joined another Libyan opposition in 1992."
Gomati says Haftar reconciled with Gadhafi in 2004, but then reneged in 2011 to join the revolution against the longtime leader.
"During the revolution, Haftar bombed the first elected parliament that came from the revolution in 2014, launched two coups in the space of three months in 2014," Gomati says.
Libyans in Tripoli tell NPR they do not believe that Haftar has earned the right to be their leader.
"If Haftar wanted to unite his country and people, he should've used the money he received from the Gulf to rebuild Benghazi. Instead, he just destroys everything. And now he will just destroy Tripoli," Huda says. "It will be hell all over again. Tripoli has been through a lot. We don't see anything hopeful. What are we going to be leaving behind for these generations? Nothing."
KATTANKUDY, Sri Lanka – As Sri Lanka's long civil war ended in this once-contested region along its eastern coast, Muslim women eager to show their piousness began wearing the black niqab veil to hide their faces.
Now in the wake of Easter suicide attacks launched by Islamic State group-linked militants that killed over 250 people, Sri Lanka's president has used his emergency powers to ban the practice previously unheard of in the island nation off the southern coast of India.
The ban, which took effect Monday, has been touted as a security measure. However, it criminalizes a practice more associated with an ultraconservative form of Islam previously unknown on the island, one that more closely adheres to the strict beliefs more common in Saudi Arabia.
It also focuses public attention on women who practice their religious beliefs peacefully, while the government and foreign diplomats say IS-linked militants armed with explosives still roam the island.
"As we have seen in Afghanistan and elsewhere, Muslim women will become a convenient cover for military action," wrote Nimmi Gowrinathan, a professor at the City College of New York. "Sri Lanka's pain from the Easter attacks should not be used to promote failed policies."
The niqab is a black veil made of thin fabric, often with a small opening from which a woman's eyes can peer out. It's far more concealing than the hijab, a scarf covering the hair that some Muslim women wear.
Most Islamic scholars and experts say a woman is not religiously required to cover her face with a niqab. However, strictly orthodox Sunni Muslims known as Salafists who advocate a literal return to centuries-old Islamic law believe women must cover their faces.
Such ideas previously were unknown in Kattankudy, a city 220 kilometers (135 miles) northeast of the capital, Colombo. But gradually, foreign money and ideas have entered the area.
The population grew more conservative, reflected in the current construction here of a massive copy of Jerusalem's famed Al Aqsa mosque, the third-holiest site in Islam. The alleged mastermind of the Easter bombings, Mohammed Zahran, also preached an increasingly extremist version of Islam in Kattankudy glorifying the killing of nonbelievers.
Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe acknowledged to The Associated Press in an interview that authorities wanted to investigate the role of foreign money in the Easter attacks, saying in particular that money from Saudi Arabia had been going to religious organizations.
"Saudi Arabia or the Middle East has been the source of many of those funds and some of it has gone into these extreme organizations," Wickremesinghe told the AP on Thursday. "These are what we are investigating."
The Saudi government did not immediately respond to a request for comment Monday.
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena, who like other government officials faces widespread criticism over security agencies' failure to stop the bombings despite having specific prior warnings, banned the practice on Sunday. Under Sri Lanka's emergency regulations, invoked after the bombing, the measure took effect Monday.
Sirisena "has taken steps to ban . all forms of face covers that may hinder one's identity been ascertained, as a threat to national security and public safety," an English-language statement from his office read. "This directive specifies the need for one's face been clearly visible for ascertaining their identify as its main criterion."
The statement added that Sirisena "issued this directive to ensure national security and a peaceful and reconciled society, where no ethnic group or community would be subjected to discomfort."
However, such a measure wouldn't have stopped the suicide bombings of the three churches and three hotels on Easter, as all were carried out by men. But some Muslim women acknowledged the need to follow the government's laws amid the ongoing crisis.
"It's good (the ban on face covering) but some people will feel some hurt because that's the Islamic culture," Fathima Musthaque said. "When they are dressing (without covering their face), they get a guilty feeling."
She added: "All Muslims are not a terrorist. The terrorists are doing this kind of work and it has affected all . not only Muslims, but all the Sri Lankan people."
On Monday, the first day of the ban, Associated Press journalists briefly saw only one woman wearing the niqab on the streets. However, many shops and businesses remain closed as the threat of more attacks remains. In Kattankudy, few women were on the street.
Neighborhood hijab shops sold colorful scarves as well as ones that are simply black, some called "Dubai style." Their shelves bore alcohol-free perfumes named after the Burj Kahlifa, the world's tallest building in Dubai, as well as one called Zam Zam, the name of a well in Mecca that Islamic tradition holds appeared by God's hand to quench the thirst of one of Ibrahim's children.
Two teenage salesmen, who gave their names only as Adhnan and Atheek for fear of reprisal for talking to journalists, said they sold at least five niqabs a week. They disagreed over whether they'd asked their own wives to wear the niqab. Adhnan said his mother had worn it since Sri Lanka's long civil war ended after getting a "deeper understanding of religion."
"I don't want anyone to look at my wife," he added.
___
Associated Press writer Rishabh Jain contributed to this report.
CNN's Sam Kiley, Bex Wright, Jo Shelley reported from Colombo and Hira Humayun reported from Atlanta
TOKYO — Two kitchen knives have been found on the school desk of a young Japanese prince who one day stands to inherit the Chrysanthemum Throne, heightening security fears and underlining the vulnerability of a royal family short on male heirs.
The knives, whose blades had been painted pink, were bound to a two-foot-long bar that straddled the school desk of 12-year-old Prince Hisahito and a neighboring desk on Friday.
Hisahito is the only young male heir to the throne, and the incident came just days before his uncle, Crown Prince Naruhito, stands to become Japan’s new emperor.
Surveillance video from the school showed a man in a blue workman’s uniform, wearing a helmet and a pair of gloves, entering the school shortly before the knives were found at noon on Friday. A man with a similar description was also spotted by cameras at the nearest subway station in Tokyo’s Bunkyo ward.
NHK, Japan’s national broadcaster, said a man in his 50s was arrested Monday in the city of Hiratsuka southwest of Tokyo.
“It is not clear whether there is any ideological motive behind the incident,” a police officer was quoted by the Sankei newspaper as saying. “Yet, it is eerie given what the suspect did to the knives.”
On Wednesday, Naruhito will take over as emperor from his popular father Akihito, who is abdicating for health reasons under the weight of official duties.
Women cannot inherit the throne in Japan. Naruhito, 59, has a daughter but no son, leaving his 53-year-old younger brother Prince Akishino next in line, followed by his only son, Hisahito. There are no other male heirs.
“Prince Hisahito is someone who will become the emperor in the future. Moreover, there is just one heir among the younger generation,” tweeted imperial expert Tsuneyasu Takeda.
“The future of Japan entirely rests upon his small shoulders,” Takeda wrote. “Are the police and the school aware of that? This time, the incident did not go further than the knives being placed. Yet, had the culprit intended, he/she could have killed or wounded him. That makes me shudder with fear.”
Local media reported that the school had received a mysterious call before the incident criticizing Hisahito’s attendance there.
The young prince started at the middle school in Bunkyo only this month, and the culprit would have been able to identify where he sits because children have their names on their desks. Children were in a different classroom when the knives were placed, local media reported.
It is not unusual for workmen to enter schools to perform maintenance and construction work, but they are usually required to show identification at the entrance to the compound. Sankei reported that the suspicious man identified himself as being there for construction work, but it was not clear if his name was recorded by guards.
Before Hisahito’s birth, Japan’s royal family had no male heirs at all, forcing the government to consider a change in the law to allow women to inherit the throne. But after he was born, the pressure for change dissipated under staunch opposition from ultra-conservatives.
Still, a 2017 poll by Mainichi newspaper found that two-thirds of Japanese people favor changing the law, and the government has said it will reopen the debate after Naruhito ascends the throne.
The knife incident only underlines the vulnerability of the line of succession under the current system.
“The Imperial House is facing extinction,” said Ken Ruoff, director of the Center for Japanese Studies at Portland State University. “The whole system is a ticking time bomb. Sooner or later they just won’t have a boy, and they almost didn’t this generation.”
“So probably not for the right reasons as far as I'm concerned — living up to what is increasingly a global standard of gender equality — it seems as though they’re going to have do something,” he said. “They’re going to have to change.”
Read more:
Japan has a 10-day holiday to mark the ascension of the new emperor. So why are people unhappy?
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