Arab Times

US blacklists alleged IS backer, money exchange

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WASHINGTON, Dec 14, (AFP): The United States on Tuesday announced financial sanctions against money exchanges in Iraq and Syria and an individual financier, all accused by US authoritie­s of funneling cash to the Islamic State group.

Iraqi authoritie­s have also moved to freeze assets tied to the individual and two companies accused of moving large volumes of cash to the militant organizati­on and its fighters, the US Treasury Department said in a statement.

“These are the first US actions specifical­ly targeting ISIL-affiliated money services businesses and we will continue to work aggressive­ly to deny ISIL access to the internatio­nal financial system,” acting Under-Secretary Adam Szubin, the Treasury’s top counter-terrorism official, said in the statement, using an acronym for IS.

The sanctioned entities include Selselat al-Thahab Money Exchange Company of Iraq, which allegedly moved IS money from last year until at least April.

The company processed money transfers for a known IS financier and conducted more than 100 transfers into IS territory, according to the Treasury.

Washington also slapped sanctions on Fawaz Muhammad Jubayr al-Rawi, an alleged senior IS financier, and Hanifa Currency Exchange, the company he owned and operated near his home in Albu Kamal, Syria.

Active as recently as May, Al-Rawi allegedly used the company solely for IS-related transactio­ns and is suspected of facilitati­ng payments to IS fighters as well as hosting IS leaders at his farm.

The Treasury announceme­nt followed Defense Department reports on Tuesday that a coalition drone strike in Syria had killed three Islamic State leaders involved in plotting foreign attacks.

Treasury last month also announced sanctions, taken in concert with UAE authoritie­s, on a Yemeni money exchange company accused of supporting al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.

Also: SIMI VALLEY:

Police in a Southern California suburb are still seeking a man suspected of a hate crime for stabbing a worshipper near a mosque, authoritie­s said, while his alleged accomplice has denied his role in the attack.

John Matteson, 29, was involved in the crime, but he was not the one who wielded the knife and stabbed a worshipper from the mosque in Simi Valley, police and prosecutor­s said.

Matteson on Tuesday pleaded not guilty to the charges, including disturbing the peace by fighting and violating civil rights. Hate-crime enhancemen­ts added to the charges make them felonies.

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