The Daily News Egypt

Militants still in Derna: Al-Ashmawy during investigat­ions

ANALYSTS CONSIDER ASHMAWY’S FALL AS “BIG WIN” FOR EGYPTIAN GOVERNMENT, URGED THEM TO AVOID EXCESSIVE HOPES AS THREATS MIGHT ESCALATE RATHER THAN DECREASE

- By Fatma Lotfi

Around 50 Islamic State group militants, headed by the jihadist Abu Al-Bara AlLibi, are still hiding in the Libyan city of Derna, said the recently captured Egyptian militant Hisham Al-Ashmawy, according to investigat­ions released by Derna’s security agency on Friday.

A Facebook page of Al Tamimi, Umm al-Razm Internal Security Agency published a statement of what it described as part of its investigat­ions withAl-Ashmawy.

The Security Agency said that AlAshmawy acknowledg­ed that the two militants Sufian Ben Gammu and Omar Rifai Sorour, the Mufti of the Shura Council of Mujahideen in Derna, were killed, the first by an airstrike, and the second in clashes with Libyan forces.

Ashmawy further said that Mahfouz Ould al-Walid, a former religious adviser to Osama bin Laden, was also still in Libya.

Moreover, over 56 wounded militants were still hiding in a number of buildings in the city of Derna, with little amounts of food, Al-Ashmawy added in his confession­s.

The Libyan National Army (LNA) has not released an official statement yet regarding the investigat­ions with Al-Ashmawy, confirming or denying the previous reports.

However, sources in the LNA operations room told Daily News Egypt that Libyan investigat­ors have started interrogat­ing him, and coordinati­on has started with Egyptian officials to hand him over soon.

Last Monday, Al-Asmawy was finally captured by the LNA in Derna. He was wearing an explosive vest but was unable to detonate it according to the LNA.

Al-Ashmawy,a former Egyptian army officer, was accused of being behind the most dangerous terrorist attacks in Egypt in recent years, including the assassinat­ion of Egypt’s public prosecutor, Hisham Barakat, and the Farafra checkpoint attack,which resulted in the death of around 30 soldiers.

He was fired from the Egyptian army after he displayed radical tendencies. Al Ash mawy is the leader of the Al-Q a ed a aligned militant group, Al-Mu rabi teen, and has links to other militant groups, including Jund Al-Islam, and Ansar Al-Islam.

The chapter of Hisham Al-Ashmawy, a major militant, Al-Qaeda fighter, and the former Egyptian special forces commander,was apparently shelved after his capture, raising inquiries regarding his significan­ce as a jihadist and a leader,and whether his arrest was a big deal.

Al-Ashmawy, who was taken into custody by the Libyan National Army (LNA) in Derna last week, was accused by the Egyptian authoritie­s of orchestrat­ing the most dangerous, and high-profile attacks in the last few years.

The attacks include the Farafra checkpoint attack which killed 22 soldiers in July 2014, the assassinat­ion attempt of the Interior Minister Mohamed Ibrahim in May 2013, and the killing of the country’s Prosecutor General Hisham Barakat in a car bomb in June 2015.

After the Libyan side finishes its investigat­ions with the militant, AlAshmawy will be handed over to his country’s authoritie­s to face a long list of charges, which have been growing throughout the last few years.

Analysts consider Ashmawy’s fall as a “big win” for the Egyptian government, but urged them to avoid excessive hopes as the threats might escalate rather than decrease.

“It’s hard to properly estimate what Al-Ashmawy’s capture will lead to,” HA Hellyer, a senior non-resident fellow at the Atlantic Council and the Royal United Services Institute in London told Daily News Egypt.

“[Al-Ashmawy] has been blamed and held responsibl­e for a lot of different attacks, not all of which are as likely as each other, but at the very least, symbolical­ly, this is a big win for Cairo, and is probably a big blow against Al-Murabiteen,, the group Ashmawy was the emir of,” Hellyer added.

Al-Ashmawy was discharged from the Egyptian army in 2011 after he displayed radical tendencies. In a voice message released in July 2015, he called for a holy war against the Egyptian government.

He is the leader of the Al-Qaedaalign­ed militant group, Al-Murabiteen, and has links to other militant groups,including Jund Al-Islam, and Ansar Al-Islam.

in 2013,Al-Ashmawy joined Ansar Bayt Al-Maqdis, the militant group based in Sinia peninsula that emerged after the toppling of the former Islamist President Mohamed Morsi. He left them after the group pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group in November 2014.

Throughout the last four years, the Egyptian media, and even authoritie­s, have maximised allegation­s regarding Ashmawy’s involvemen­t in several attacks hitting the country, while he has been in Libya for the last four years according to Libyan officials.

“It’s obviously difficult to know quite how important he was in terms of ongoing terrorism plots—especially given the nature of different types of media reports—but it’s still a big deal, nonetheles­s,” Hellyer noted.

However, another expert believes things might have gone worse, and Al-Ashmawy followers, and Al-Murabiteen’s followers might become more dangerous.

“I have done substantia­l research on the effects of leadership decapitati­on,that is,the effects of removing the leader of a militant group, especially with the rise of drones, leadership decapitati­on has become an increasing­ly prised approach to counter terrorism,’ Max Abrahms, a professor of political science at Northeaste­rn University, and author of the new book Rules for Rebels:The Science of Victory in Militant History, told DNE.

Abrahms elaborated,“my research shows, however, that militant groups tend to become even more extreme when their leaders have been removed.”

Moreover,Abrahms highlighte­d that he found ‘statistica­l evidence that militant groups “are more likely to perpetrate terrorism by attacking civilians in the immediate aftermath of the leader getting killed or captured,as lower-level members who are increasing­ly less restrained jockey for power.”

“This research has implicatio­ns for the arrest of Hisham Al-Ashmawy because he is the leader of the Al Qaeda offshoot Al-Murabiteen, which may now become even less restrained against civilians, as his replacemen­ts rise to the top,” Abrahms explained.

Therefore,Abrahms said that ‘Egyptian authoritie­s should be careful what they wish for in capturing him.’

A death sentence is waiting for Al-Ashmawy in Egypt, as he was convicted in absentia to death over his involvemen­t in a string of deadly attacks in his country, including the Farafra checkpoint attack.

Following his arrest, state media and pro-government newspapers have quoted several military experts describing Al-Ashmawy as “the black box”, looking for getting informatio­n regarding his group tactics, and planned terrorist attacks through investigat­ions.

They also wish that the arrest will help state security institutio­ns in countering terrorism inside the country,giving a boost to the state’s recent ‘Sinai 2018’ comprehens­ive military operation, which was launched last February in central and North Sinai, the Nile Delta region, and the Western Desert.

However, Zack Gold, a Middle East analyst, believes that the arrest of AlAshmawy will have any impact on operations in Sinai.

“Al-Ashmawy broke ties with militants in Sinai when they chose to align with ISIS in late 2014, so his capture will have no impact on intelligen­ce for Egyptian operations in North Sinai,” Gold said.

 ??  ?? Al-Asmawy was finally captured last week by the LNA in Derna
Al-Asmawy was finally captured last week by the LNA in Derna
 ??  ?? Al-Ashmawy is accused of taking part in killing of the country’s Prosecutor General Hisham Barakat in a car bomb in June 2015
Al-Ashmawy is accused of taking part in killing of the country’s Prosecutor General Hisham Barakat in a car bomb in June 2015
 ??  ?? A poster published by Al-Murabiteen showing Al-Ashmawy in military uniform groups declaring that Al-Ash
A poster published by Al-Murabiteen showing Al-Ashmawy in military uniform groups declaring that Al-Ash
 ??  ?? A wanted poster of Al-Ashmawy released by the police
A wanted poster of Al-Ashmawy released by the police

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