China Daily

UN warns IS losses shouldn’t lead to complacenc­y

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UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations counterter­rorism chief warned on Monday that recent losses by Islamic State extremists “should not lead to complacenc­y at any level”, saying the extremist group remains a global threat with up to 18,000 militants in Iraq and Syria.

Vladimir Voronkov also told the Security Council that the IS group is reported to have created a network of cells in various cities in Afghanista­n, including the capital Kabul, and is closely linked to its leaders in Syria and Iraq.

He said the extremist group’s “center of gravity” remains in Iraq and Syria, where it reportedly controls between 14,000 and 18,000 militants, and its central leadership maintains “an intent to generate internatio­nally directed attacks”.

His briefing on the latest UN report on extremist threats from the IS group and al-Qaida comes as US President Donald Trump has ordered a US troop withdrawal in Syria, saying the IS group has been defeated, and a potential troop pullout in Afghanista­n.

Voronkov, the undersecre­tarygenera­l of the UN Office of CounterTer­rorism, said the threat from the IS group has increased because combatants who fought with the group are returning home, relocating or being released.

Michele Coninsx, head of the UN Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorat­e, said the IS group’s dramatic loss of territory “has driven its evolution into a covert and more locally focused network in Iraq, Syria and elsewhere”.

“Despite its dwindling control over territory that once provided it with resources and a base to plan and launch attacks, it continues to present us with many complex challenges,” she told the council.

US deputy ambassador Jonathan Cohen said the significan­t military setbacks the IS group has suffered, notably in Iraq, Syria and the southern Philippine­s, are “a testament” to the work of a global coalition to defeat the extremist group.

But he said “much more work remains to be done to defeat ISIS (the IS group)”.

Cohen made no mention of any troop withdrawal­s from Syria or Afghanista­n but said “ISIS is seeking to survive, reconstitu­te and ultimately re-emerge in Iraq and Syria”.

“ISIS is also coordinati­ng with affiliates to plan attacks elsewhere, including Afghanista­n, Southeast Asia and West Africa,” he said.

The UN’s Coninsx stressed that the IS group, along with other extremist groups and their affiliates, have “consistent­ly demonstrat­ed their intent and ability to exploit new technologi­es and seek innovative ways to circumvent obstacles to its financial, technical and recruitmen­t capabiliti­es”.

Russia’s UN Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said that while the IS group’s income from contraband fuel continues to fall, the extremist group seized a number of oil fields in Syria’s eastern province of Deir al-Zour last autumn, enabling it to sell oil at $30-$35 a barrel for months through intermedia­ries.

He said the IS and other extremist groups continue to take hostages, participat­e in the illegal trade in drugs and agricultur­al products, and the sale of organs and cultural artifacts — and they are constantly looking for new sources of income.

 ?? FADEL SENNA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? Fleeing from the Islamic State’s final tiny pocket in Syria, women and children sit in the back of a truck near Baghuz, eastern Syria, on Monday.
FADEL SENNA / AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE Fleeing from the Islamic State’s final tiny pocket in Syria, women and children sit in the back of a truck near Baghuz, eastern Syria, on Monday.

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