Kano (Nigeria), Feb 10: Nigeria’s State Security Service announced Tuesday the arrest last month of an alleged recruiter for the Islamic State group (ISIS) of Iraq and Syria, the Premium Times reported.
Abdussalam Enesi Yunusa was arrested on January 17 in here.
Yunusa was reportedly an undergraduate student at the Federal University of Technology in Minna, Nigeria, where he was working toward earning a degree in Information and Media technology, according to a statement provided by the State Security Service.
“Prior to his arrest, Yunusa had completed arrangements to embark on a journey to join an ISIS terrorist training camp in Libya, with other Nigerians whom he recruited for the Islamic State,” according to the statement from State Security Service official Tony Opuiyo.
US to send more troops to aid Afghan forces pressed by Taliban
ABUL (Afghanistan), Feb 10: The US Army will deploy hundreds of soldiers to the southern Afghan province of Helmand, where government forces have been pushed to the brink by Taliban militants, a military spokesman said Tuesday.
It will be the largest deployment of US troops outside major bases in Afghanistan since the end of the NATO combat mission in 2014.
Though the military insists that the soldiers will not take active combat roles, US Special Operations forces have increasingly been drawn into the fighting in Helmand as one important district after another has fallen or been threatened by Taliban insurgents.
Col Michael T Lawhorn, a spokesman for the US military in Afghanistan, said in a statement that the new deployment would provide protection for the current Special Operations troops in Helmand and give extra support and training for the 215th Corps of the Afghan National Army.
Afghan forces in Helmand have taken heavy casualties in recent months and have been cut off by the Taliban in many places.
“Our mission,” Lawhorn said, “remains the same: to train, advise, and assist our Afghan counterparts, and not to participate in combat operations.”
He would not detail the number of troops or the unit involved in the deployment, citing Pentagon policy. But a senior US military official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss operational matters, said the unit being sent to Helmand, the 2nd Battalion, 87th Infantry, was slightly smaller than the usual battalion size of 700 to 800 soldiers. On Monday, The Guardian newspaper reported that up to a battalion would be sent to Helmand.
The new troops will replace another unit that was already in Afghanistan, the official said, and will not add to the total number of US troops in the country, which stands at roughly 9,800 service members.
The official could not say where the deployment would be based within Helmand but said that the problems in the province demanded the attention of US and Afghan commanders.
“Certainly Helmand is the diciest place in Afghanistan right now, the place where ANSF have had the most setbacks from without and within,” the official said, using the abbreviation for the Afghan National Security Forces, meaning the army and police. “It’s part of what matters most right now or the future of the country.”
The additional US soldiers would be “doing some retraining, re-equipping and advising” for the troubled Afghan 215th Army Corps, the official added.