The Enemies of the Gray Man
- OPEN SOURCE INTELLIGENCE
- Botswana - Directorate on Intelligence and Security Services (DISS)
- Indonesia - Kopassus Command Group IV
- Libya- Jamahiriya Security Organization
- Venezuela- General Intelligence Office
- South Africa- National Intelligence Agency
- Saudi Arabia- Al Mukhabarat Al A'amah
- Albania- SHISH State Intelligence Service
- Sri Lanka- Special Task Force
- Kazakhstan- Arystan Special Task Force
- Bolivia- Delta Group
- Liberia- National Security Agency Operation Directorate
- Korea- National Intelligence Service
OPEN SOURCE INTELLIGENCE
Each of the organizations listed is an actual intelligence, law encforcement, or paramilitary organization in existance today. They all are mentioned in the Gray Man. The acompanying articles are culled from open-source documents on the internet, and no implication should be made as to their veracity.
Botswana - Directorate on Intelligence and Security Services (DISS)
Police receive reports of DIS torture
30 March, 2009 in Botswana
source: Mmegi
ISAIAH MOREWAGAE
Staff Writer
27 March 2009
The police have received three reports alleging abuse by the Directorate of Intelligence and Security (DIS).
The Minister of Justice, Defence and Security, Dikgakgamatso Seretse told Parliament yesterday that one report is from a police officer, while two are from civilians. Seretse was answering questions from the Member of Parliament for Gaborone Central, Dumelang Saleshando. The minister said a DIS operative was killed by his pistol during a shoot-out with thugs. “Investigations on this matter are still on-going therefore, I am not in a position to disclose any information,” Seretse said. A Zimbabwean, Blessing Mukweni is currently in court on allegations that he shot and killed DIS officer, Daniel Moilwa in Gaborone on November 19 last year.
Since its inception early last year, the DIS has dominated news headlines for the wrong reasons. Four members of the security forces claimed torture at the
The Minister of Justice, Defence and Security, Dikgakgamatso Seretse told Parliament yesterday that one report is from a police officer, while two are from civilians. Seretse was answering questions from the Member of Parliament for Gaborone Central, Dumelang Saleshando. The minister said a DIS operative was killed by his pistol during a shoot-out with thugs. "Investigations on this matter are still on-going therefore, I am not in a position to disclose any information," Seretse said. A Zimbabwean, Blessing Mukweni is currently in court on allegations that he shot and killed DIS officer, Daniel Moilwa in Gaborone on November 19 last year.
Since its inception early last year, the DIS has dominated news headlines for the wrong reasons. Four members of the security forces claimed torture at the hands of DIS agents late last year. Two soldiers and two policemen alleged that they were severely beaten and humiliated in a torture chamber at the offices of DIS in Gaborone in October last year.
Indonesia - Kopassus Command Group IV
Kopassus, abbreviation for Komando Pasukan Khusus (Army Special Force Command) is an Indonesian Army special forces group that conducts special operations missions for the Indonesian government, such as direct action, unconventional warfare, sabotage, counter-terrorism, and intelligence gathering.
Training Members of the Kopassus are selected from other units for their mental and physical toughness and ideological soundness. Those who pass an initial screening take part in a 9-month selection, with heavy emphasis on physical endurance. At the end of this phase, a 380-km march is conducted through mountainous terrain with minimal rations. Then a week-long evasion and escape phase is conducted; if caught, one is removed from the program. As manpower is increased to meet a three- and four-part rotational cycle, additional training would be expected. Also, as units have been used fairly extensively throughout the years, many of the Kopassus members have actual mission experience.This training is the qualification for new members to join Kopassus. After joining Kopassus there is still more advanced training, divided into two categories:
- Intelligence Gathering Abilities
- Counter Terrorism Unit
During the 1990s Kopassus conducted training with various other special forces, such as the British SAS (Special Air Service Regiment), the Malaysian Grup Gerak Khas in jungle warfare, urban terrain and counter terrorism skills, the American Delta Force in counter terrorism skills, and the American Green Berets in jungle warfare and training the local communities to conduct intelligence-gathering and to provide support. Kopassus and the Malaysian Grup Gerak Khas (GGK) enjoy a close relationship and both train extensively together.
Intelligence abilities In Kopassus, intelligence is taught after members have passed the selection process. The syllabus in intelligence can be sub-divided into two categories: Sandi Yudha, and gathering intelligence behind enemy lines, of which Sandy Yudha is considered the more specialized. Sandy Yudha is defined as the ability to persuade people to do something, and the ability to create exploitable situations.During the 1980s, Kopassus troops improved their skills in intelligence gathering by cross training with world famous intelligence services, such as the Israeli Mossad[citation needed], even though Indonesia does not have diplomatic relations with Israel. With the help of third parties, it became possible to conduct this training in Indonesia. The nickname for the trainer was "Arizona". After Arizona finished the training of Kopassus, the British were invited, with their MI6[citation needed]. The training specialized in the effective and efficient use of intelligence gathering devices.
Types of arms used by Kopassus
- Side arm: SIG-Sauer P226/P228, Berreta 92SB/92F, Browning HP, Walther PPK, Pindad P1/2, Glock 17, Glock 19, FN Five-Seven
- Submachine gun: Heckler & Koch MP5 variants, CZ-Scorpion, Uzi, Daewoo K-7, FN P90.
- Assault rifle: Pindad SS2, Pindad SS1 variants, AK47, Steyr Aug A1/A2, M16A2, M4A1, H&K HK53, H&K 416, SIG 552, H&K G36C, Galil .
- Shotgun: Franchi SPAS-12, Benelli M3T.
- Sniper Rifle: Pindad SPR-1, Sig-Sauer SG550, H&K MSG 90, H&K G3 Sniper, Galil Sniper, Remington 700, Accuracy International AWM.
- Machine gun: FN Minimi, Ultimax 100, Daewoo K-3 LMG, FN MAG, and M60
- Recoilless rifle : Armbrust, Carl Gustav recoilless rifle
- Water devices : Drager, Spero, Oxydive, Farallon, Rubber (Zodiac type) boats
- Knife : Kopassus black Fairbairn-Sykes made by Carl Schlieper Germany
Human rights issues Kopassus has been accused of a great number of human rights violations. Its name appears frequently in the reports of Amnesty International and other international human rights organizations, as well as in the reports by Indonesian human rights groups. Kopassus members are frequently accused of assault. For example, Koes Sofyan of the Association of Human Rights Victims Abuse (SPKP HAM) was in 2003 detained by members of Kopassus in Aceh. He was detained for nearly three months and tortured, before being released without charge. Such charges were already made in the years of the Suharto dictatorship, though making them then in Indonesia itself was difficult and quite risky. In November 2001 Kopassus killed Theys Eluay, the chairman of the Presidum Dewan Papua. Two years later four Kopassus members were convicted for this murder. Kopassus has also been associated with illegal economic activities, like involvement in the trade of kayu gaharu and illegal gold mining in West Papua and other areas, and the trade in drugs.
Libya- Jamahiriya Security Organization
Haiat amn al Jamahiriya
Jamahiriya Security Organization (JSO)
[aka External Security Organization (ESO)]
[aka Libyan Intelligence Service (LIS)]
The Libyan External Security Organization, a/k/a Jamahiriya Security Organization (hereinafter "JSO") is an intelligence and operational entity which operates separately from, but is an agency, instrumentality and/or organ of the Libyan government.
This service is divided into two branches: Internal Security, and Foreign Security. This organization has several branches, amongst which: Foreign Liaison Office, which has overall responsibility for most overseas intelligence operations and a sub-directorate provides direct contact with international terrorist groups.
- Foreign Security Special Operations,
- External Security (including External Operations and Fundamentalist Movements)
The Libyan External Security Organization (ESO) is the principal intelligence institution in Libya which has been responsible for supporting terrorist organizations and for perpetrating state sponsored acts of terrorism.
In November 2001 Abdallah Senussi, the deputy head of Libyan intelligence who was implicated in the bombing of a French airliner in 1989, was put under house arrest. Abdallah Senussi, who is Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's brother-in-law, was put under house arrest along with several other Libyan intelligence officials. Senussi had been a Kadhafi confidant for 20 years. Senussi, along with five Libyan agents and diplomats, was condemned in absentia to life in prison by a Paris court in March 1999 for his involvement in the bombing of a French UTA airliner over Nigeria in 1989, killing 170 people.
Venezuela- General Intelligence Office
The New York Times
June 3, 2008 Tuesday
Late Edition - Final
CHAVEZ DECREE TIGHTENS HOLD ON INTELLIGENCE
BYLINE: By SIMON ROMERO
SECTION: Section A; Column 0; Foreign Desk; Pg. 1
LENGTH: 1127 words
DATELINE: CARACAS, Venezuela
President Hugo Chavez has used his decree powers to carry out a major overhaul of this country's intelligence agencies, provoking a fierce backlash here from human rights groups and legal scholars who say the measures will force citizens to inform on one another to avoid prison terms.
Under the new intelligence law, which took effect last week, Venezuela's two main intelligence services, the DISIP secret police and the DIM military intelligence agency, will be replaced with new agencies, the General Intelligence Office and General Counterintelligence Office, under the control of Mr. Chavez.
The new law requires people in the country to comply with requests to assist the agencies, secret police or community activist groups loyal to Mr. Chavez. Refusal can result in prison terms of two to four years for most people and four to six years for government employees.
''We are before a set of measures that are a threat to all of us,'' said Blanca Rosa Marmol de Leon, a justice on Venezuela's top court, in a rare public judicial dissent. ''I have an obligation to say this, as a citizen and a judge. This is a step toward the creation of a society of informers.''
The sweeping intelligence changes reflect an effort by Mr. Chavez to assert greater control over public institutions in the face of political challenges following a stinging defeat in December of a package of constitutional changes that would have expanded his powers.
Mr. Chavez, who has insisted the defeat will not dampen his ambitions to transform Venezuela into a Socialist state, said the new law was intended to guarantee ''national security'' and shield against ''imperialist attacks.''
He lashed out at its critics as being agents of the ''empire,'' meaning the United States.
The law's stated aim of protecting Venezuela follows a history of antagonism between the governments in Caracas and Washington, dating at least from the Bush administration's tacit support for a short-lived coup against Mr. Chavez in 2002.
Recently, Venezuela has claimed it was subject to military intimidation from the United States, pointing to a recent violation of Venezuelan airspace by an American fighter jet and Washington's recent reactivation of its Fourth Fleet to patrol Latin American and Caribbean waters.
On Sunday, Mr. Chavez referred to critics of the intelligence law as de facto supporters of the Bush administration and of the Patriot Act, the American antiterrorism law that enhances the ability of security agencies to monitor personal telephone and e-mail communications.
Mr. Chavez's new intelligence law has similar flourishes. For instance, it authorizes his new intelligence agencies to use ''any special or technically designed method'' to intercept and obtain information.
But the new law may also point to the influence of Cuba, Venezuela's top ally, on intelligence policies. For instance, the use of community-monitoring groups to assist in gathering intelligence resembles Cuba's use of neighborhood Committees for the Defense of the Revolution to report on antigovernment behavior.
''This is purely Cuban-style policy,'' Juan Jose Molina, a legislator with Podemos, a leftist party that broke from Mr. Chavez's coalition last year, said of the new intelligence law. ''Our rulers want to impose old models upon us.''
Interior Minister Ramon Rodriguez Chacin announced the intelligence overhaul in a public appearance here last week, saying it was needed to combat ''interference from the United States'' by having intelligence agency workers imbued with ''ideological commitment.''
On Monday, however, Mr. Rodriguez Chacin softened his tone, saying the law would not lead to political intimidation or restrict freedom of expression. ''We are talking about the responsibility all Venezuelans have with the security of the state and the resolution of any crime,'' he said.
The drafting and passage of the law behind closed doors, without exposing it to the public debate it would have had if Mr. Chavez had submitted it to the Assembly, also contributed to the public uproar and suspicion.
One part of the law, which explicitly requires judges and prosecutors to cooperate with the intelligence services, has generated substantial concern among legal experts and rights groups, which were already alarmed by the deterioration of judicial independence under Mr. Chavez.
While the language of this passage of the law, and several others, is vague, legal experts say the idea is clear: justice officials, including judges, are required to actively collaborate with the intelligence services rather than serve as a check on them.
''This is a government that simply doesn't believe in the separation of powers,'' said Jose Miguel Vivanco, Americas director for Human Rights Watch, the New York-based rights organization. ''Here you have the president legislating by decree that the country's judges must serve as spies for the government.''
Mr. Chavez's opponents here grasped for reasons as to why he chose this moment for the intelligence overhaul, with his government grappling with economic problems like climbing inflation and slowing economic growth even as the price of oil, the lifeblood of Venezuela's economy, remains near record levels.
''Even within the Bolivarian movement, this would officialize Soviet- and Cuban-style purges, accusing dissidents of being spies, traitors or agents of the imperialist enemy,'' El Nacional, a normally staid opposition newspaper, said in an editorial that ended, ''This is revolting.''
In some ways, the changes would merely refine the control Mr. Chavez already exerts over intelligence operations. His government has already used voter registration data to purge employees deemed disloyal to the president from the intelligence agencies and other parts of the civil service.
Several legal activists said Monday that they were studying ways to appeal the law, but the viability of a legal challenge remains unclear.
''This is the most scandalous effort to intimidate the population in the 10 years this government has been in power,'' said Rocio San Miguel, a prominent legal scholar who heads a nongovernmental organization that monitors Venezuelan security and defense issues.
Ms. San Miguel said information her group had collected could be deemed illegal under the new law. The group has data from military sources showing that Mr. Chavez's efforts to create a force of one million reservists had fallen far short.
''Under the new law, this information could be considered a threat to national security and I could be sent immediately to jail,'' she said. ''Effectively this is a way to instill fear in NGOs and news organizations and parts of society that remain outside the government's reach.''
South Africa- National Intelligence Agency
Africa News
October 18, 2008 Saturday
South Africa;
ANC Dissident Says Spies at Work
BYLINE: Cape Argus
LENGTH: 796 words
Mosiuoa Lekota is convinced he's being spied on - despite denials by the National Intelligence Agency this week that it put a tail on the former defence minister and breakaway rebel.
As Lekota prepared to head for Bloemfontein to address tomorrow's rally of supporters for his planned national convention in two weeks' time, he spoke of a mysterious car which had followed him as he headed to Sandton for his first explosive press conference 10 days ago.
Last Thursday, his bodyguard, Sello Mptyaatona, was kidnapped and robbed by armed men - who delivered a chilling message that Lekota and his former deputy and fellow conventionist, Mluleki George, are treating as a death threat.
"Before my bodyguard was kidnapped we were being trailed by mysterious people in a car with false number plates," Lekota said.
"My bodyguard is a police person. He took the [registration] number of that vehicle to the police, and when they checked they found that those number plates had been tampered with - they found that that make of car could not have had those number plates.
"A day later my bodyguard was kidnapped - and then given a message to convey to me: don't go on with your political activity because you will continue with it in heaven.
"This is concrete evidence. It is clear that whoever kidnapped my bodyguard was busy with an operation that is not legal."
Lekota's bodyguard escaped with his life, unlike Captain Francois Ramashile, the man who helped to protect former president Thabo Mbeki but was shot dead while asleep next to his wife at home in his Pretoria bedroom last month. The shooting took place just three days before Mbeki's recall by the ANC - an action that triggered the cascade of political events that have left South Africans reeling.
Now the police are saying they are not ruling out the possibility that the father-of-three was assassinated.
Superintendent Vish Naidoo told the Saturday Star: "The investigation is still continuing and it can be confirmed that nothing was taken [from the house]. We don't know the motives and can't rule out anything."
Intelligence Minister Siyabonga Cwele was however clear about Lekota's spying concerns: he has looked into the allegations and found no evidence of any unlawful operation by the National Intelligence Agency.
His spokesperson, Lorna Daniels, this week said while it wasn't policy to confirm or deny NIA operations, "we do think it is important to reassure citizens that we are not concerned with legitimate political activity.
"Only those engaged in unlawful activity receive the NIA's attention," she said. Lekota's activities were "legitimate".
Daniels would not comment on the possibility that Lekota was the target of a private spying operation mounted by people unhappy with his plans to launch a new party that may challenge the ANC at the ballot box.
That initiative was boosted this week when former Gauteng premier Mbhazima Shilowa climbed aboard as convener and "volunteer-in-chief" - although his main job will be to raise funds.
Shilowa's announcement that he was abandoning the ANC unleashed a stream of invective from the union movement he helped build - and fulfilled his prediction at his press conference when he said he expected to be vilified.
Cosatu general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi told the Saturday Star that Shilowa's ambition had seen him change from being "a son of the workers" and an ardent socialist "who wore red socks with pride" to a cigar-smoking wealthy businessman with "disappointed political ambitions".
"No one pushed him from the position of premier - he sidelined himself," Vavi said. "He can only ascend to power [again] if he can bring the poor to vote."
As the ANC's national executive committee deliberated for hours behind closed doors in a specially convened meeting to decide what to do about the rebels in its ranks, NEC member Charlotte Lobe announced that she, too, was joining Lekota.
The same evening, ANC president Jacob Zuma addressed the nation on SABC TV and all the state broadcasters' radio stations, conceding that the ANC was losing leaders but insisting this did not mean it was under threat or that there was a 50-50 split.
Zuma defended the decision by the ANC's national working committee on Monday to summarily suspend Lekota and George, saying no organisation could "just stand by when people use it to undermine it, or even attempt to destroy it".
Announcing its decision to haul Lekota and George before a disciplinary committee, the NEC acknowledged that plans for a party in opposition to the ANC was "a challenge" - and spelt out its plans to contain the threatened revolt, including sending NEC members into the regions to try "to heal whatever divisions may exist and repair whatever hurt may have been done". - Additional reporting by Sheree Bega
Saudi Arabia- Al Mukhabarat Al A'amah
BBC Monitoring Trans Caucasus Unit
Supplied by BBC Worldwide Monitoring
December 8, 2008 Monday
Saudi Arabia "behind Jondollah hostage taking"
LENGTH: 456 words
Text of report in English by Iranian news channel Press TV website on 8 December
A report reveals Saudi Arabian intelligence agencies were behind the abduction of a group of Iranian police officers by Jondollah.
Sixteen Iranian police officers were abducted by Jondollah [Soldiers of God] terrorists at a checkpoint in the southeastern city of Saravan in Iran's Sistan-Baluchestan Province on June 12.
The armed insurgents initially threatened to kill the hostages unless 200 of its members are released from Iranian prisons.
The cell killed three of the hostages in June. The Arabic-language TV channel al-Arabiya aired footage of the execution of the Iranian hostages.
After Iran refused to heed their warning, the terrorist group killed the remaining thirteen hostages on December 3.
Iran's Prosecutor General Qorban Ali Dorri-Najafabadi has warned that Iranian forces will deliver a "crushing response" to the militants in border areas.
The Arabic Nahrainnet website cited informed sources in Pakistan's Peshawar on Monday who claimed that Saudi Arabian intelligence agencies have significantly increased the number of their covert operations.
The sources also reported that Saudi Arabia has extended its channels of communication across Pakistan and particularly Peshawar over the past three months.
According to information obtained from sources in Peshawar, Saudi Arabia has been directly supporting Jondollah to carry out the hostage taking of Iranian police officers.
The report claims Saudi Arabia and the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) have been using the "proxy army" to destabilize the government in Iran.
Earlier in July, Pakistan's former Army Chief, Retired General Mirza Aslam Baig, said the outlawed group is the main recipient of US financial and military aid.
Baig said Washington has been providing Jondollah with training facilities to fuel unrest in the area and strain Tehran-Islamabad relations.
ABC News, in 2007, cited US and Pakistani intelligence sources that the group, which "has taken responsibility for the deaths and kidnappings of Iranian soldiers and officials", "has been secretly encouraged and advised by American officials."
In another report in July, investigative journalist Seymour Hersh revealed that US Congressional leaders secretly agreed last year to President George W. Bush's $400-million funding request for a major escalation in covert operations in Iran.
Under the ruling, the US can arm and fund terrorist groups such as the Mojahedin-e Khalq Organization [MKO] and Jondollah militants.
The group's ringleader Abdolmalek Rigi describes his terrorist cell as a 'national movement' and denies any links to Washington.
Source: Press TV website, Tehran, in English 1529 gmt 8 Dec 08
Pictured- Logo of the Saudi Arabian General Intelligence Presidency
Albania- SHISH State Intelligence Service
The State Intelligence Service, commonly known by its acronym SHISH, is the primary intelligence agency of Albania. It was created in 1991 by the Albanian Peoples Assembly as SHIK, acronym of Shërbimi Informativ Kombëtar (National Intelligence Service), but it later changed it`s name in SHISH. The agency has been used to manage internal dissent and protect the interests of the individual members of the regime.On April 1, 1997, Bashkim Fino announced that SHIK activity would be suspended effective from March 31. SHIK Director Bashkim Gazidede and his deputy, Bujar Rama, resigned. On May 30, the President, named Arben Karkini as the new head of SHIK. He was succeeded by Fatos Klosi after the Socialists won the July 1997 parliamentary elections. In October 1997, the United States Central Intelligence Agency sent a team of experts to assist the government in restructuring the SHIK. In November 1999, SHIK was renamed SHISH. The actual direcor is Bahri Shaqiri.Mission and FunctionThe State Intelligence Service has the following duties:
- collect information from abroad for the purposes of national security;
- undertake intelligence activity for purposes of the protection of integrity, independence and constitutional order;
- collect information in regard to terrorist activity, production and trafficking of narcotics, in regard to production of weapons of mass destruction as well as crimes against the environment.
- collect information in regard to organized crime that endangers the national security.
Relationship with other state entitiesInstitutional Position of the State Intelligence Service and relationship with other state bodies:The State Intelligence Service is under the authority of the Prime Minister. Its Head is appointed and dismissed by the President of the Republic with the proposal of the Prime Minister.SHISH is operating within this context and while it has been identified as being "generally under effective civilian control" (U.S. Department of State, 2004) the agency has still been associated with various abuses within the country and continues to play a significant role in domestic politics. While the Albanian government has received support from the U.S. and European countries in working to establish or reform national institutions including it's intelligence and security services.
Sri Lanka- Special Task Force
The Special Task Force (STF) (Sinhala: විෙශ්ෂ කාර්ය බළකාය) is an elite special forces unit of the Sri Lanka Police specializing in Counter-Terrorist and Counter-Insurgency operations. It was formed in 1983 not as a military force but rather as a highly-specialised police unit. The STF heads Counter-Terrorist missions and – as the most highly trained police organisation in Sri Lanka – it would be the lead unit whenever law enforcement forces engaged the Tamil Tigers (LTTE). The STF is mostly stationed in the Eastern Province of Sri Lanka where the LTTE was wiped out. Some small number of units have placed in Mannar District and Vavuniya District. Other units are based in Colombo and provide VIP security. The STF is internationally recognized for its expertise in these areas and it is often invited to assist foreign law enforcement agencies with planning major events such as the 2008 Beijing Olympics and in dealing with possible terrorist threats.
HistoryFollowing the insurrection in Sri Lanka in 1971, in which many Police Stations were targeted by JVP insurgents, there were suggestions to train and equip the Police for duties above normal Police functions. However, nothing was done until 1983 when the outbreak of violence convinced the government to form a special Counter Terrorist and Counter Insurgency police force called the Special Task Force.Formation
When the Special Task Force (STF) was formed in 1983, it comprised mainly of existing policemen. Trained by the Sri Lankan Army in the handling of Infantry weapons and were given basic training in Jungle warfare, They deeply resemble a para-military organisation and later separate training facilities for the Special Task Force have been established in Kalutara, 96 kilometers south of Colombo. The first platoons formed were deployed in the North of Sri Lanka to provide additional support for Police Stations and to stem the LTTE separatists.
The STF was enhanced considerably in 1983 when former British Special Air Service (SAS) crack teams were brought in to provide specialized training in all aspects of Counter Terrorism and Counter insurgency operations. August 11, 1984, that the Israel Internal Security Agency Shin Beth was involved in the training of the Sri Lankan armed forces. Many officers belonging to Israel were also involved in the training of the Sri Lankan soldiers in Colombo.
Recently, the STF has received from Indonesia P2 APCs made by Sentra Surya Ekajaya to help the unit conduct their counter insurgency operations against the LTTE.
Operations
By 1987, heavily involved in the Sri Lankan civil war, the STF was in control of the area from Kiran to Potuvil in the Batticaloa Division. The STF was deployed in Company formation into 15 separate camps. When the Indian Peace Keeping Force was moved into the Batticaloa in 1987 as part of the ongoing peace process, the STF was in complete control of Batticoloa, and had restored a level of normalcy to the area. From 1983 to 1987 when the STF was in control over Batticoloa not a single STF camp had come under attack from the LTTE.
Operation Niyathai Jaya (Definite Victory)
In its first major operation since the signing of the ceasefire agreement in 2002, Special Task Force troops launched a limited offensive named "Definite Victory" (In Sinhala: නියතයිි ජය) on January 4, 2007 against LTTE rebels in the Kanchikudichcharu and Thoppigala south regions of the Ampara District, as a reaction to the child abductions in Bakmitiyawa, Ampara and abduction of two teachers and 23 Tamil children in December 2006 while they were returning from extra classes to their homes.
As a result of this offensive, the elite police commandos were able to overrun more than fifteen rebel camps including the Stanly Base, which was the main LTTE camp in the Ampara District and a regional intelligence and supply camp of the LTTE, Bagayadi Base, where local and foreign foodstuffs and sanitary material was stored, Janak Base, which made clothing identical to Sri Lanka Army and Special Task Force uniforms, Jeewan Base, which was another supply camp from which the STF was able to recover four vehicles and the Diana Base where LTTE leaders meet. This camp was furnished with luxury items which were denied to the ordinary LTTE cadres.
After the fall of Stanly Base, STF troops were able to find an explosive laden truck and a motor cycle that the rebels were planning to use to carry out suicide attacks in the capital of Colombo. And it is also reported that LTTE was housing a large number of child soldiers conscripted by them in this camp. Other than that, STF troops were able to recover a large quantity of arms and ammunition, coffins, large number of anti-personnel mines, vehicles, satellite and radio receivers, global positioning systems, power generators, boats with name and logo of the Non Governmental Organization "Save the Children", tents with the logo of "UNHCR" and a fully equipped hospital donated to the militants by a Dutch INGO named ZOA Refugee Care. This NGO donated hospital is named by the tigers as Thileepan memorial hospital. STF also said that they also found a water tanker truck donated by, the Tamil Rehabilitation Organization (TRO) which is a front organization of the LTTE, who collect funds especially in the United States and Canada purportedly for civilians, but actually for the terrorist group. However, aid workers argue that the supplies must have been taken after they evacuated their office due to heavy fighting. Jeevan Thiagarajah, the head of the Consortium for Humanitarian Agencies, has stated that the matter is simply a misunderstanding.
As a result of this mission STF troops able to kill four rebels and the STF commented that the militants were fleeing from the area without retaliating against their troops.
CriticismThe Special Task Force has been accused of various human rights abuses including extrajudicial killings and involvement in the disappearance of individuals.
According to a United Nations commissioned study conducted in 1997, the STF was the arresting agency in 5% of the 1219 reported cases of disappearances in the Batticaloa district in North Eastern Province between 1988 and 1996. Additionally, after a visit to Sri Lanka from 24 August to 5 September in the same year, UN Special Rapporteur Bacre Waly Ndiaye reported the existence of allegations that individuals had died "while in the custody of the Special Task Force of Sri Lanka in Colombo"
At least two incidents of extrajudicial killings involving members of the STF have also been noted by the Sri Lankan government or outside observers. Following the newest round of fighting between the government and the LTTE starting in April 1994, the mutilated bodies of between 21 and 31 Tamil males were discovered in rivers and lakes near Colombo. On August 17, 10 STF officers (and 15 others) were charged with committing the murders, which allegedly took place at the STF headquarters in Colombo. In addition, at least 17 extrajudicial killings were carried out by Sri Lankan security forces (including the STF) in Eastern Province in retaliation for LTTE attacks. Human rights monitors "determined" the deceased to be "civilians", but security forces maintained that they were LTTE members.
Kazakhstan- Arystan Special Task Force
Kazakhstan: Authorities Insist Personal Enmity Behind Sarsenbaev's Murder February 27, 2006
By Gulnoza Saidazimova
Supporters gather at Sarsenbaev's funeral on 15 February (RFE/RL)Kazakh authorities announced today that Erzhan Utembaev masterminded the killing of opposition leader Altynbek Sarsenbaev two weeks ago -- citing "personal enmity" as a reason behind the murder. Utembaev, chief of administration for the Kazakh Senate, was arrested last week. The announcement comes after thousands of opposition supporters marched in Almaty on 26 February in memory of Sarsenbaev and other victims of what they call the current regime's "political terror" and demanded that those responsible for the murder be brought to justice. The opposition as well as some analysts have cast doubt over the conclusions of the initial official investigation.
PRAGUE, 27 February 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Kazakh Interior Minister Baurzhan Mukhamedzhanov told journalists in Astana today that Erzhan Utembaev, chief of the Kazakh Senate's administration, planned the slaying of Altynbek Sarsenbaev.
Angry Over Article? Mukhamedzhanov said the motive for the killing was a "long-lasting personal enmity" between the two men. "The person who ordered [the killing] was the former head of the Senate administration [Erzhan Utembaev]," he said. "After Sarsenbaev published an article giving a negative characterization of [Utembaev] in one of the national newspapers, their relations deteriorated rapidly. After the publication of that article, Erzhan Utembaev's career, in his own words, went downhill. Blaming that on Sarsenbaev, he nurtured the idea of taking revenge on him for a long time.""The problem is how were all those confessions made by those who allegedly now say that they were involved in the murder? Unfortunately, [in Kazakhstan], those who confess to murder often have nothing to do with it. I am afraid we are seeing that practice in this case."
Sarsenbaev, a former Information Minister and once the Kazakh ambassador to Russia, joined the opposition in 2003 and was one of the leaders of the Naghyz Ak Zhol (True Bright Path) opposition party. He was kidnapped on 11 February and was found shot dead in the Almaty outskirts two days later with his bodyguard and his driver. On 20 February, five agents of Arystan (Lion), the Kazakh national security service's (KNB) elite unit, were arrested for the killing and allegedly confessed to kidnapping Sarsenbaev and his aides.
Security Service Involvement KNB chief Nartay Dutbaev resigned on 21 February following the news about the arrests. Utembaev was arrested the next day. Authorities said he ordered the kidnapping and murder of Sarsenbaev. Mukhamedzhanov also said today that Rustam Ibragimov -- a former Arystan officer -- organized and oversaw the operation while the five other current officers carried out the murder. He said the two have been interrogated and added that Utembaev confessed to taking a $60,000 bank loan to pay for the contract killing.
Opposition Not Buying It The announcement comes after numerous calls from the opposition for a fair investigation and one day after a large protest in Almaty. The opposition has insisted that Sarsenbaev's murder was politically motivated and it has formed a public committee to conduct an independent probe into the murder. Today, dozens of protesters picketed the Almaty City Interior Affairs Department demanding greater transparency in the investigation of Sarsenbaev's killing. Analysts also express doubts that personal enmity led to Sarsenbaev's killing. They say today's announcement from the country's interior minister makes it clear how Kazakh authorities want to interpret the murder.
Second Killing Since November Sarsenbaev was the second opposition figure to die under suspicious circumstances in the last three months.
In mid-November, prominent opposition member Zamanbek Nurkadilov's body was found in his Almaty villa with three gunshot wounds. An official investigation concluded that Nurkadilov had committed suicide. The opposition ruled out this conclusion, arguing that Nurkadilov would not be able to shoot himself twice in the chest and once in the head. The opposition says political reasons are behind both deaths. (RFE/RL's Kazakh Service contributed to this report.)
Bolivia- Delta Group
April 28, 2009 Tuesday
Late Edition - Final
Plot Foiled? In Bolivia, Truth Is Elusive
BYLINE: By SIMON ROMERO; Andres Schipani contributed reporting from La Paz, Bolivia.
SECTION: Section A; Column 0; Foreign Desk; Pg. 5
LENGTH: 1120 words
DATELINE: CARACAS, Venezuela
Wielding assault rifles, the members of Delta Group, an elite Bolivian police unit, quietly crept up the stairs to the fourth floor of the Hotel Las Americas. It was 4 a.m. on April 16 in Santa Cruz, the city in the lowlands of Bolivia that is a bastion of opposition to that nation's president, Evo Morales. Then they did their work.
Within minutes, they shot dead three men: Michael Dwyer, 24, of Ireland; Arpad Magyarosi, 39, a Romanian of Hungarian descent; and Eduardo Rozsa Flores, 49, a Bolivian with Hungarian and Croatian passports and a nebulous past as a leader of foreigners fighting for Croatia during the breakup of Yugoslavia.
As the bullet-riddled bodies were shown on national television, the authorities claimed to have foiled a plot to kill Mr. Morales, a former coca grower reviled by Santa Cruz's light-skinned elite. Soon after the raid, security forces found a cache of explosives and guns that they said were linked to the dead men.
''These terrorists were connected to an ideology of the extreme fascist right,'' said Alvaro Garcia Linera, a former Marxist guerrilla who is Bolivia's vice president.
But the episode, with its dash of Balkan intrigue, remains far from an open-and-shut case of right versus left.
Instead, it falls somewhere in that gray area of Bolivian politics, in which Mr. Morales's claims of destabilization plots, now a regular feature of his government, and his opponents' counterclaims that such plots are shams contribute to growing tensions between the central government and the rebellious lowlands.
''If this weren't such a serious matter, it would make a great screenplay, tragedy and farce all wrapped together,'' said Jim Shultz, a political analyst in Cochabamba, in central Bolivia.
In a move that angered political leaders in Santa Cruz, the central government last week ordered more than a thousand troops to the region. Juan Ramon Quintana, a senior aide to Mr. Morales, said the decision was made partly because of a concern over ''the presence of terrorists that are a potential threat to the security of the Bolivian state.''
Meanwhile, the killings have raised a raft of nettlesome questions. Who backed such a group? How did officials detect them? Why did Mr. Morales send the police all the way from the capital, La Paz, to deal with them? And exactly what was a man like Mr. Rozsa Flores, at turns a poet and a war correspondent before his foray into the Balkan killing fields, doing back in Santa Cruz?
Indeed, the mystery of the case revolves largely around this enigmatic figure, believed to be the group's leader.
He left Bolivia as a teenager, going with his parents into exile in Chile before moving to Hungary, the birthplace of his father, an emigrant of Jewish origin. In Budapest, Mr. Rozsa Flores said he came into contact with Ilich Ramirez Sanchez, the Venezuelan terrorist known as Carlos the Jackal, while studying linguistics and literature, according to published interviews.
Finding work as a correspondent for a Spanish newspaper covering the breakup of Yugoslavia, Mr. Rozsa Flores abandoned journalistic objectivity and took sides. He commanded volunteers fighting for Croatia in the early 1990s, but his battlefield experience was marred by claims that he oversaw the murder of a Briton and a Swiss citizen.
''He lived an overcrowded life, full of events, locations, people, gossip, good and bad legends,'' said Ibolya Fekete, a Hungarian director who made a 2001 film, ''Chico,'' based on Mr. Rozsa Flores's life. ''He never fit in anywhere.''
Returning to Hungary after the war, Mr. Rozsa Flores converted to Islam, a shift from his earlier association with Opus Dei, the conservative Roman Catholic group. And he found a new political obsession, explaining in a television interview last year with a Hungarian journalist that he was moving to Bolivia to organize a militia.
''There is a need for weapons,'' he said in the interview, which was broadcast for the first time in Hungary last week after his killing, ''so it isn't about the boys marching in the streets with flags and bamboo sticks.''
Mr. Rozsa Flores went further in the interview, saying his goal was not toppling Mr. Morales, but achieving autonomy for Santa Cruz, Bolivia's wealthiest department, or province. Envisioning a clash with La Paz over this issue, he nonchalantly described his goal as ''declaring independence and creating a new country.''
Over the weekend, a prosecutor presented a video recorded on a cellphone, without clear audio, in which he said Mr. Rozsa Flores had discussed a plan to kill Mr. Morales on a recent trip to Lake Titicaca.
Such assertions fit well into the way Mr. Morales's government portrays Santa Cruz: as a region where powerful industrialists and bankers, some of them descendants of Croatian immigrants, want to secede from Bolivia in a rupture inspired by Yugoslavia's disintegration.
But while Mr. Morales has described the men killed in Santa Cruz as part of a ''tentacle of a structure'' intent on killing him and other senior officials named in a list obtained by his government, missteps by officials in describing their handling of the group have led to further questions about the men and what they were doing in Santa Cruz.
Mr. Garcia Linera, the vice president, at first said the three were killed in a 30-minute gunfight, but an insurance report filed for the hotel and obtained by La Razon, a newspaper, apparently found no signs of an exchange of gunfire. Two men taken captive at the hotel, Elod Toazo, a Hungarian, and Mario Tadik, a Bolivian, seem to have surrendered without a fight.
''What happened was the killing of three people who were sleeping, which means murder,'' said Oscar Ortiz, president of Bolivia's Senate and a top opponent of Mr. Morales.
Alfredo Rada, a senior minister, made things worse when he went on television with images of men in Santa Cruz clasping weapons, claiming they were linked to those killed. But the men in the photos, lifted from a Facebook page, debunked the claim by explaining that they practiced ''airsoft,'' a game in which participants fire at one another with pellet guns.
The case is fueling conspiracy theories of every stripe, but some secrets were taken to the grave by Mr. Rozsa Flores and his two comrades in arms.
In his interview last September in Hungary, he speculated that Mr. Morales's intelligence service knew about him, and he also touched on the possibility that he might meet his death in Bolivia.
''I will now go to my home country, my homeland; if something happens to me there, then what?'' he said. ''Firstly, it was my fate; secondly, it happens to me in the best place possible.
Liberia- National Security Agency Operation Directorate
Africa News
December 13, 2007 Thursday
Liberia;
Coup Plot Suspect Stuns With Testimony
BYLINE: The Analyst
LENGTH: 842 words
A key defendant in the ongoing treason trial yesterday stunned the nation when he testified in open court that the Liberian government had wanted him to implicate certain opposition politicians.Taking the witness' stand yesterday at Criminal Court-'A' on Capitol Hill, Temple of Justice in Monrovia, the relaxed and cautious retired Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL), Col. Andrew Dorbor told the court that the Ellen-led government through the National Security Agency (NSA), had listed top Liberian opposition politicians and former Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) Soldiers for him, while serving as state witness, to implicate them in the alleged coup plot.
Before a crowded court, Col. Dorbor said while in detention at the National Security Agency (NSA), an officer of the agency, whom he recalled James Pearson went to him with a list containing the names of prominent opposition politicians and coerced him to implicate them in the alleged plot.He further revealed that the government through the NSA agent told him that through that means, he as a suspect of the coup would gain the passport for his freedom.Dorbor said the idea was that he implicate the opposition leaders and at the same time convincingly testify against them on behalf of the state.
According to Dorbor, the opposition politicians that the government wanted him to implicate in the alleged plot include former House Speaker, Edwin Melvin Snowe, who is representing District #5 of Montserrado County; Liberty Party's Standard-bearer, Cllr. Charles Walker Brumskine; George Weah, the youthful first partisan of the Congress for Democratic Change (CDC); Cllr. Varney Sherman, standard bearer of the Liberia Action Party (LAP) which later branched with other parties into the Coalition for the Transformation of Liberia (COTOL). Suspect Dorbor further said that the NSA operative requested him to name Henry Boima Fahnbulleh Jr., the Security Advisor of President Sirleaf as one of the masterminds of the alleged coup plot. The key defense witness also said that the government wanted him to implicate Gen. Charles Julu, and one William Gibson as well as former top Armed Forces of Liberia (AFL) soldiers.
Still stunning the court with what observers called "troubling news", Dorbor, the first defense witness to take the stand, testified that the government also wanted him to name another 31 deactivated AFL soldiers as other coup plotters to oust the Liberian government headed by President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Continuing with his revelations of what had taken place during his detention at the NSA, Dorbor indicated that the government not only wanted him to implicate other Liberians as coup plotters, but that he was forced to sign series of documents that had been prepared by NSA investigators.
According to him, a particular document that he was coerced to sign was "a request for protective custody"."I signed the documents because I was threatened by the NSA investigators, that if I did not sign the documents, I would surely feel the weight. I signed the documents with fear that I could be killed in the NSA cell," witness Dorbor testified.
Korea- National Intelligence Service
The Advertiser (Australia)
December 20, 2008 Saturday
1 - State Edition
Asia-Pacific Plot to kill Kim, says North Korea
BYLINE: HYUNG-JIN KIM, SEOUL
SECTION: FOREIGN; Pg. 77
LENGTH: 411 words
NORTH Korea has accused South Korea of hiring an agent to track Kim Jong Il and suggested that the man had planned an assassination attempt before his arrest.
The sensational allegation comes amid a serious worsening of relations between the divided Koreas, as well as intense speculation about Mr Kim's health since he reportedly suffered a stroke and had brain surgery in August.
North Korea's Ministry of State Security - the nation's spy agency - identified the arrested man's family name as Ri and said he was trained by the South to get information about Mr Kim's movements.
``The organisation sent him speech and acoustic-sensing and pursuit devices for tracking the movement of the top leader and even violent poison in the end,'' said the statement, also read on North Korean state television.
It said the ``terrorist mission'' was ordered by South Korean intelligence ``to do harm to the top leader''.
South Korea's National Intelligence Service said it was checking the claim.
The statement, carried by the North's official Korean Central News Agency, did not mention Mr Kim by name, but a South Korean Unification Ministry spokesman said the North had previously used such wording to refer to him. He said the Unification Ministry was in no position to confirm the report.
Tensions on the Korean peninsula have run high since the pro-U.S. conservative government of President Lee Myung-bak took office in February with a pledge to take a tough line on the North.
Ties worsened this month after the North restricted traffic at the border, expelled some South Koreans from a joint industrial zone and suspended a tour program to the ancient city of Kaesong.
The North's statement also said authorities recently arrested unspecified agents who tried to gather soil, water, leaves and dust in its major munitions industrial area to gather information on its nuclear program.
This month, international talks on the North's nuclear development ended in stalemate over its refusal to put into writing any commitments on inspecting its past atomic activities.
Though it was impossible to verify the North's espionage claims, the divided states - which fought the 1950-53 Korean War - are known to actively spy on each other and have carried out various plots to assassinate each other's leaders in the past.
South Korean experts said it was rare for the communist country to issue a statement on an alleged assassination attempt, and were divided over the claim's authenticity.




