Cyber-spying and Cyber-espionage rampant as US-Israel move to “full-on” Cyber-war in Middle East
New Middle East super-virus uncovered
9 August, 2012 – A Akhbar
A new “state-sponsored” cyber surveillance virus dubbed “Gauss” has stolen passwords and key data from thousands of bank users in the Middle East, the top IT security firm Kaspersky Lab said on Thursday.
According to Kaspersky, Gauss was a complete and “complex, nation-state sponsored cyber-espionage toolkit,” which aims to steal sensitive data, with a specific focus on browser passwords and online banking account details.
It has similarities to Stuxnet and Flame, the Russian company said in a statement, noting that although the new malware program was discovered in June 2012 it appears to have been in use since September 2011.
Gauss has the same source code as Flame, which was apparently designed to steal information from Iran’s suspected nuclear program, with the United States and Israel suspected of being behind its origination
Stuxnet was used to attack Iran’s nuclear centrifuges.
Kaspersky said Gauss had a specific focus on banking and financial data and its Trojan capability was used to steal detailed information about infected PCs including browser history, cookies, passwords, and system configurations.
“It is also capable of stealing access credentials for various online banking systems and payment methods,” said Kaspersky, whose virus detection experts discovered and named Gauss.
In July 2012, command and control servers used by Gauss’s unknown originators stopped functioning, according to the statement.
“Analysis of Gauss shows it was designed to steal data from several Lebanese banks including the Bank of Beirut, EBLF, BlomBank, ByblosBank, FransaBank and Credit Libanais,” and also “targets users of Citibank and PayPal,” it added.
Gauss’s main module was named by its creators after the German mathematician Johann Carl Friedrich Gauss, according to Kaspersky. …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Free Hassan Alsharqi
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Hot, Hot Summer in the Middle East
Hot, Hot Summer in the Middle East
By: Colin S. Cavell, Ph.D. – 6 August , 2012
August temperatures in the Middle East get very hot. From the mid-90s Fahrenheit (i.e. 35+ C) at night to the high 120s F (i.e. 50+ C) during the day, one is constantly aware that their daily actions will be dictated by the environment. Exacerbating this extremely oppressive temperature is the nearly total lack of rainfall during the summer months, thus rendering all and sundry dry and devoid of moisture. Only the spiny tailed lizards or dhubs which inhabit the region are content with the scorching sun and subsequent heat, hence their tendency to perch on a rock and bask in the sun during these glory days of summer.
In fact, many attribute the death of the famous British officer, writer, archaeologist, linguist, and spy Gertrude Bell, who lived a good while in Iraq until her death in 1926, to the overwhelming heat. On July 13, 1917, she described the heat in Baghdad thusly:
We have had a week of fierce heat which still continues, temperature 122 odd and therewith a burning wind which has to be felt to be believed. It usually blows all night as well as all day and makes sleep very difficult. I have invented a scheme which I practise on the worst nights. I drop a sheet in water and without wringing it out lay it in a pile along my bed between me and the wind. I put one end over my feet and draw the other under and over my head and leave the rest a few inches from my body. The sharp evaporation makes it icy cold and interposes a little wall of cold air between me and the fierce wind. When it dries I wake up and repeat the process (The Letters of Gertrude Bell, Vol. II, 1927).
And, again, on August 3rd, 1917, Bell wrote of a visit by a Colonel Willcox:
Well, he told me some interesting things about the heat wave and its consequences. It began on July 10 quite suddenly with a temperature of 112 and ended on July 20 with a temperature of 122.8. In between it was frequently over 120. He notes that 115 is the limit of human endurance. The moment the temp. rises above that point, heat strokes begin, and when it drops below, they end. We could have saved many lives if after the crisis was over there had been any cool place to put the men in. But there wasn’t and after fighting through the heatstroke they died of heat exhaustion. I suppose if we had had masses of ice we could have made cool places, but ice was lacking. It happened once or twice that we well people went without it because the hospitals needed all there was. I don’t think I shall stay through the whole of next hot weather unless there is any very strong reason for it. I shall come to England for a month and return in September. But who knows what we shall be all doing by then. I don’t believe we shall still be fighting. Some way or other peace will have to come about (The Letters of Gertrude Bell, Vol. II, 1927).
Historically, military campaigns in the region have occurred either in the spring months (February through June) or in the fall (September through December).
For example, the most recent rebellions occurring under the nomenclature of the ‘Arab Spring’ or ‘Islamic Awakening’ began in Tunisia in December 2010 and spread throughout the Arab world from January to March 2011. Current fighting in Syria is reported to be reaching a crescendo for a major assault by early September of 2012.
In January of 2012, the Yemeni government declared open warfare against al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, and sporadic fighting continues to this day for control of many rural areas in the country. The October 2000 al Qaeda bombing of the USS Cole in the Yemeni port of Aden, the 2008 September attack on the US Embassy in Sana’a, and the June 2011 bombing of the presidential palace in Sana’a, have proven that the opposition remains strong and that the successor regime to former dictator Saleh has a ways to go before civil peace is recognized in the southern Arabian Peninsula.
Fighting broke out at the beginning of May 2008 when the Lebanese government attempted to shut down Hezbollah’s telecommunication network, a move which was reversed by the Lebanese Army by the end of the month after Hezbollah fighters defeated opposition militiamen around West Beirut.
The US war on Iraq began in March 2003 with American troops remaining in country until December 2011.
The anti-government uprisings against the government of Saddam Hussein following the 1990 Gulf War occurred from March to April 1991 and were crushed by Hussein’s government.
The Iraq-Iran War, or the First Persian Gulf War, commenced in September of 1980 and lasted until August of 1988.
The historic Iranian Revolution overthrew the regime of Shah Mohamed Reza Pahlavi in February of 1979, and the US has been outraged ever since.
The Lebanese Civil War began in April of 1975 and lasted until October of 1990.
The Six-Day War lasted from June 5-10, 1967.
And while there have been many other violent conflicts in the Middle East, they usually break out in either the spring or the fall months. Yes, if fighting is to occur in the Middle East, war strategists usually plan for either the winter or fall months, because the summer months of July and August are just too much for humans to endure.
And while modern means of refrigeration and air conditioning have transformed life in much of the Middle East into the 21st century, these accoutrements can seldom be brought to bear on the front lines of battle. Nature has thus set up a barrier between June and September which precludes much outdoor human activity in the Middle East, save for swimming. To ignore this natural bulwark and run offensive operations during this time—as the Gulf monarchies are doing in Syria currently—is an act of folly, as the heat will discombobulate and confuse their Salafist fighters who are already operating on three eggs short of a dozen, as they are being manipulated by some of the most unholy miscreants on the Earth. As well, in this summer of 2012, it appears that our Gulf monarchs have forgotten that the month of Ramadan should be reserved for reflection and renewal and not conflict and murder.
Such befuddlement was recently witnessed with the video-taped executions of captured prisoners by the so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA) who are mostly al Qaeda insurrectionists flown into Turkey or Jordan by Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the other Gulf monarchies in an attempt to divert the Arab Spring from seeping into the cracks of their decrepit kingdoms.
The video was posted online and graphically depicted the summary executions of more than a dozen Syrian army prisoners after a kangaroo trial conducted on the back of a pick-up truck in Syria’s second largest city of Aleppo. Labeled a “war crime” by human rights advocacy group Human Rights Watch, the incident was confirmed by a reporter with the Turkish newspaper Milliyet.
Reporters Hannah Allam and Austin Tice, with the McClatchey Newspapers, write of other incidents of summary executions by these Gulf monarchy-backed insurgents including the capture of 45 Assad loyalists in Al Tal, north of Damascus with eight being executed, 25 said to be released, and the rest held for prisoner exchange. As reporters Allam and Tice conclude regarding the growing list of executions and incidents of torture being carried out by these FSA mercenaries, they are “muddying the Western narrative of a heroic resistance force struggling against a vicious regime.”
Whether one attributes such FSA idiocy to the failed and bizarre premise of autocratic monarchs backing an external aggression to allegedly advance “democracy” in Syria or not, the fact remains that the intense summer heat is creating a fog of war which will continue to perplex and mystify the FSA puppeteers as they continue to issue bombastic statements and shrill ultimatums. —30—
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Bahrain Regime “off-the-leash” Gassing Operations is Chemical Warfare against Civilans
Bahrain finds an off-label use for tear gas as chemical warfare.
Bahrain: the Tear Gas Regime
By Steve Fake, August 9, 2012
Physicians for Human Rights just released a report on the Bahraini government’s pervasive use of tear gas to repress its restive civilian population. Bahrain has raised the global bar on the usage of tear gas to unprecedented heights. It has become the Tear Gas Regime.
Consider this excerpt from the PHR report:
“PHR investigators visited one home in which residents provided “guest gas masks” to visitors exposed to toxic chemical agents in and around the home. “We’ve been exposed to tear gases almost every day,” said one resident of a Shi’a neighborhood. “We’ve had canisters shot in the house, on the doorstep, and on the roof. We’ve had so many attacks, I can’t count the number of times. You don’t need to go outside to smell the ‘tear gas.’”
The report continues:
“Preliminary analysis of data suggests that the majority of Shi’a neighborhoods (comprising 80% of all neighborhoods in Bahrain) have been exposed to toxic chemical agent attacks at least once per week since February 2011.”
That is a remarkable record of sustained gassing. What does this mean for the neighborhoods and villages affected? As PHR details:
“Symptoms of CS [the most commonly used chemical agent in contemporary ‘tear gas’ worldwide] exposure include severe tearing, burning in the nose and throat, eye spasms, chest tightness, coughing, and wheezing among other signs of oral and respiratory distress.”
Imagine encountering that on a daily or weekly basis as many Shia neighborhoods in Bahrain now are.
There is plenty of reason to question the legitimacy of tear gas usage in virtually any context. PHR medical investigators noted in a report published the AMA’s journal in 1989 that:
“[T]he evidence already assembled regarding the pattern of use of tear gas, as well as its toxicology, raises the question of whether its further use can be condoned under any circumstances… [T]here is an important role for the independent [health] professional: to study, document, analyze, and report on such hazards and to advise government on what does and does not carry an acceptable risk. If a weapon is found to present too serious a risk, it is then the responsibility of those in charge of public safety to decide on alternatives.”
Note the ‘pattern of use’ analysis from even the late ‘80s. When is ‘tear gas’ used in an appropriate and proportionate manner? Can a protestor or bystander among us think of an instance? International law permits its use under the category of ‘riot control’. Thus, it is properly deployed to disperse ‘riots’, not nonviolent gatherings, and not some scattered projectile throwing and minor property destruction.
The very label ‘tear gas’ is a euphemism which obscures that its use on humans: “poses serious health risks and even causes death.” The proper term for ‘tear gas’ is ‘toxic chemical agent’ as PHR employs. As PHR notes, ““Tear gas,” implying that these chemical agents merely cause tearing, is a misnomer.“
Perhaps the roots of the crowd control method should give us pause. The origin of tear gas derives from chemical weapons that became so infamous in WW1.
Lest anyone continue to regard ‘tear gas’ as a mere inconvenience, it has also been implicated as a carcinogen, and may even damage DNA, thus impacting one’s future children and family lineage.
…more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Bahrain regime cuts arbitrary prison sentences for illegally detained to placate its Western Partner demands to improve Human Rights Crisis
Bahrain court cuts jail terms for attack
AFP/Manama – 8 August, 2012
A Bahraini court yesterday cut jail sentences against 11 people convicted of attacking a soldier and acquitted four others, a lawyer said.
The appeals court reduced the main charge against 15 defendants from attempted murder to “physical attack” on the soldier, while charges of taking part in illegal assemblies and rioting during a month of Shia-led protests last year remained unchanged.
Five of the defendants had their sentences reduced to two years. The sentences against two other defendants were dropped to one year and six months respectively, the lawyer said requesting anonymity.
The 16th defendant lost his right to appeal for remaining at large, he said.
Bahrain’s interior ministry says more than 700 people, including some police officers, have been injured in the protests since the beginning of the year.
Sporadic demonstrations have intensified since a March 2011 crackdown ended month-long protests in Pearl Square demanding democratic reforms.
Meanwhile, the kingdom’s prosecution referred two adolescents to a juveniles centre after charging them with burning tyres to block a street in a Shia village.
Protesters from the Shia community tend to block main roads in their villages outside Manama with burning tyres and garbage containers.
“The prosecution questioned three defendants, including two adolescents, over burning tyres on a main road,” said Nawaf al-Awadi, the public prosecutor in the Northern Province, in a statement. …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
The Ongoing arbitrary arrests and judicial harassment of human rights defenders in Bahrain
PRESS RELEASE – THE OBSERVATORY
BAHRAIN: Ongoing arbitrary arrests and judicial harassment of human rights defenders
Paris-Geneva, August 9, 2012 – As new cases of arbitrary arrests and ongoing judicial harassment have been reported in Bahrain, the Observatory remains extremely concerned with the very repressive climate faced by human rights defenders in the country.
On August 2, 2012, Ms. Zainab Al-Khawaja was once again arrested while she was protesting alone at Al Qadam roundabout against the arbitrary detention of her father Mr. Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja, founder of the Gulf Centre for Human Rights (GCHR), former President of the Bahrain Centre for Human Rights (BCHR), and former MENA Director at Front Line. While arresting Ms. Al-Khawaja, police officers verbally assaulted her and threatened her with reprisals as she was legitimately resisting their orders to give a blood sample. She was finally forcibly led to the Fort Prison Hospital before being transferred to Isa Town Detention Center, where she was kept handcuffed despite a serious leg injury sustained after security forces shot her with tear gas canisters at close range. On August 4, 2012, the Public Prosecution remanded her into custody for seven days.
The Observatory further recalls that Mr. Nabeel Rajab, President of the BCHR, Director of the GCHR and FIDH Deputy Secretary General, has faced constant judicial harassment, as four cases have been brought against him since May 2012 in relation with his human rights activities. Mr. Rajab is still facing three of this cases. In particular, he has been detained since July 9, 2012 and sentenced to 3 months’ imprisonment for alleged libel after he tweeted the following on June 2: “Khalifa, leave the residents of Al Muharraq, its Sheikhs and its elderly. Everyone knows that you are not popular here, and if it wasn’t for the subsidies, they wouldn’t have gone out to welcome you. When will you step down?”
After his arrest and sentencing, his lawyers immediately filed two appeals. One of them requests the suspension of the sentence on the grounds that the investigation did not provide any solid legal basis to convict Mr. Rajab. After several postponments, this appeal was scheduled to be considered by the Higher Appeal Court on August 5, 2012. However, on that day, the judge decided again to postpone the hearing to August 12, officially in order to call the police officer who was in charge of the investigation procedure to the stand.
The Observatory is deeply concerned about this new postponement, as its only aim seems to be to keep Mr. Nabeel Rajab in detention as long as possible, by delaying the examination of the request filed by his lawyers against his 3-month imprisonment sentence. The Observatory reiterates its call on the Bahraini authorities to immediately and unconditionally release him as his detention is arbitrary and only aims at sanctioning his human rights activities.
The Observatory firmly denounces these new developments against human rights activities in Bahrain, and recalls the authorities’ obligation to comply with the international human rights instruments ratified by the Kingdom of Bahrain, and with the 1998 Declaration on Human Rights Defenders and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Iran takes initiative to find solutions for Syria Crisis
Iran hosts Syria talks, calls for national dialogue
9 August, 2012 – By Mohammad Davari – Agence France Presse
TEHRAN: Iran on Thursday hosted a 29-nation conference on Syria with the aim of stopping bloodshed there and forging a role for Tehran as peace-broker for its beleaguered Arab ally.
Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi opened the meeting by calling for “national dialogue between the (Syrian) opposition, which has popular support, and the Syrian government to establish calm and security,” according to state television.
He added that Iran was prepared to host any such dialogue.
Salehi said Iran was opposed to “any foreign interference and military intervention in resolving the Syrian crisis” and supported efforts extended by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.
He said Iran had sent humanitarian aid to Syria to make up for international sanctions on Damascus that he said “are not in the interest of the Syrian people but have added to their suffering.”
Excluded from the Tehran meeting were Western and Gulf Arab nations that Iran has accused of giving military backing to the bloody near 17-month insurgency seeking to oust Syrian President Bashar Assad.
State media said the foreign ministers of Iraq, Pakistan and Zimbabwe were present.
Lower-ranking diplomats, most of them ambassadors, represented the other nations.
Salehi listed those nations as: Afghanistan, Algeria, Armenia, Benin, Belarus, China, Cuba, Ecuador, Georgia, India, Indonesia, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Maldives, Mauritania, Nicaragua, Oman, Russia, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Turkmenistan and Venezuela.
A representative of the United Nations was also present.
…more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Iran denies hostages killed in Syria
Iran denies hostages killed in Syria
9 August, 2012 – Al Akhbar
All the Iranians kidnapped by Syrian rebels last week are alive and well, an Iranian foreign ministry official said, contrary to statements by rebels holding them that three of the captives had been killed in an air attack.
Syrian rebels waging an uprising against the government of President Bashar al-Assad seized a busload of 48 Iranians in Damascus on August 4. Iran, an ally of Assad, says they are religious pilgrims.
The rebels said on Monday that a government air attack in Damascus province had killed three of the Iranians, and they threatened to kill the remaining captives unless the army stopped its attack.
“Contacts we have made to get information about the fate of the kidnapped pilgrims indicate that all of them are in sound health and there is no indication that some of them were martyred,” Mojtaba Ferdowsipour, head of the Iranian foreign ministry’s Middle East office, told Iran’s Al-Alam television, Fars News Agency reported on Wednesday.
“The published reports in this regard are false,” he said. No details were given about the source of his information. …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
End of time for Kings and Tyrants – Monarchies of the Arab World in time of Revolution
Monarchies of the Arab World in time of Revolution
By Shafeeq Ghabra – Professor of Political Science at Kuwait University – Morocco News
ARAB TIMES
The Arab rebellions which began in December 2012 pressured the monarchies to offer reforms and changes. Although the monarchies have more legitimacy than the long-time rulers of the Arab republics had. But the populations they rule have lived with some of the same lack of political expression, freedoms, and accountability as Arabs under other systems of government. Movements in Jordan and Morocco are trying to gain traction, which is why it is important for the monarchies to present the people with road maps for reform. Moroccan King Mohammed VI has been the most forthcoming in constitutional and political reforms among all the region’s monarchs and has in the short term been able to absorb the energy of the street. This has helped Morocco avoid major instability while also electing a prime minister and a government based on competition between various political parties.
In Jordan King Abdullah II has formed four governments since the Arab spring. Reforms have been limited, however, and challenges from the street movement have gained strength. In May 2012, the resignation of Awn Khasawneh, a reform-oriented prime minister, contributed to the fragmentation of the regime’s political base. Khasawneh had objected to the limitations on his reforms coming from the security apparatus and from the king’s inner circle.
Issues such as unemployment, corruption, democratization, the voting system, and social justice, along with the power of the monarch versus the power of the parliament, stand at the core of the present movement in Jordan. Jordan currently sits at the crossroad of a total system collapse or far-reaching reforms that could lead to a constitutional monarchy. Attempts to avoid major reforms will only exacerbate the situation, plus Jordan’s stability could be shaken once the Syrian rebellion concludes.
In the Gulf, Bahrainis filled the streets to protest discrimination, centralization of power, marginalization of the Shia majority, and policies of politicized naturalization directed against the Shia majority. They also expressed their dissatisfaction with having had the same prime minister for forty years. Bahrainis had agreed through a national document in 2001 with King Hamad Al-Khalifa to turn Bahrain into a constitutional monarchy but it never came to fruition. Bahrainis rebelled in February 2011 but where suppressed and the GCC intervened militarily for the first time ever to support the Bahraini government.
The situation in Bahrain is currently in an uneasy state of paralysis and tension between the people and the regime. Only through reform, rotation of power, and a popularly elected government and prime minister can Bahrain regain true peace. The militarization of the conflict, with some activists taking up arms, is not a remote possibility if the existing stalemate continues. …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
The Crisis in Bahrain and Western Press Gullibility
Bahrain and the Gullible Washington Post
John Glaser – 8 August, 2012 – AntiWar.com
In an editorial this week, the Washington Post displays incredible ignorance of US foreign policy. “When the Obama administration resumed military sales to the Persian Gulf nation of Bahrain in 2012,” the editors naively write, “it explained the decision as an effort to bolster moderate elements in the monarchy, whose Sunni ruling family has resisted demands for greater democracy from the mostly Shiite population.” Since the brutal Bahraini monarchy has continued abusing its citizens and rejecting democratic reforms, the Post wonders “whether the concession to a regime that has been a close U.S. ally paid off.”
It really doesn’t take a Master’s degree in international relations to know that the Obama administration had no intention of “bolstering moderate elements” in Bahrain. The Nobel Peace Prize winner continued giving money and arms to the Bahraini regime precisely so the movement for democratic reforms could be crushed. Common sense leads to this realization – since when does giving riot gear, tanks, helicopter gunships, and a million pounds of ammunition to dictators encourage moderation?
US support for Bahrain doesn’t bolster anything except US control of the Persian Gulf. The US Navy’s Fifth Fleet directs military operations in the Persian Gulf, Red Sea, and Arabian Sea and secures the Straits of Hormuz, through which 40 per cent of the world’s seaborne oil passes. It is one of the largest military forces in the region, with 40 vessels and close to 30,000 personnel. It also sticks in the craw of Iran, the primary bogeyman in the region – i.e., the one who doesn’t follow US orders.
But the Post, along with most in the media, can’t manage to utter the obvious, which is that Washington is interested in propping up dictatorships, not opening up societies with democracy and moderates. But at least the Post is complaining about some of the right things:
As Assistant Secretary of State Michael Posner reported in testimony to Congress’s Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission last week, the Bahraini government has continued to prosecute 20 leading political activists; “despite assurances to the contrary,” it obtained the conviction of nine medical professionals who treated opposition activists during demonstrations last year. The country’s best-known human rights activist, Nabeel Rajab, is serving prison time for a tweet that called for the resignation of the hard-line prime minister.
Security forces continue to employ harsh tactics to put down demonstrations in Shiite villages, including what a new report by Physicians for Human Rights calls the “indiscriminate use of tear gas as a weapon.” It said police regularly fire tear gas canisters “directly at civilians or into their cars, houses or other closed spaces” in an effort “not just to disperse crowds but to harm, harass, and intimidate the largely Shia neighborhoods that are home to many protesters.” …source
August 9, 2012 No Comments
FinSpy and Regime Privacy Rights Invasion in Bahrain
Press Release: UK Company Helps Bahrain Government Spy on Activists
08 August, 2012- by Jadaliyya Reports – SHOAH
UK COMPANY HELPS BAHRAIN GOVT SPY ON ACTIVISTS
Malicious E-Mail Attachments Sent to Activists Steal Passwords, Record Skype Calls
Bahrain’s government is spying on Bahraini activists with a malicious computer program apparently supplied by a UK firm.
Bahrain Watch founding member Bill Marczak, and Citizen Lab security researcher Morgan Marquis-Boire analyzed a string of suspicious e-mails sent to activists over the past two months. The e-mails promised exclusive images or documents about the political situation in Bahrain. Upon closer examination, the e-mails were found to contain attachments that installed a malicious program on a victim’s computer. Some of these e-mails impersonated Al Jazeera English reporter Melissa Chan.
The malicious program was found to record keystrokes, take screenshots, record Skype calls, and steal passwords saved in web browsers, e-mail programs, and instant messaging programs. The malicious program sent this data to an internet address in Bahrain.
The analysis suggests that the malicious program is “FinSpy,” a product of UK firm Gamma International. FinSpy belongs to the FinFisher suite for “Governmental IT Intrusion and Remote Monitoring Solutions.” Gamma International was criticized for apparently selling the same product to Mubarak’s regime in Egypt. Before technology giant Apple closed the security gap, FinSpy would infect computers by tricking users into thinking that it was an iTunes update. London-based NGO Privacy International has threatened to take the UK government to court for failing to control the export of surveillance technology to repressive foreign regimes.
During the analysis of FinSpy, a stolen GMail password was later used in an attempt to access the GMail account, suggesting that the Bahraini government is actively monitoring and exploiting the information captured by FinSpy.
A detailed report of the technical analysis of the program can be read at:
https://citizenlab.org/2012/07/from-bahrain-with-love-finfishers-spy-kit-exposed/3/.
A non-technical report of the analysis by Bloomberg News can be read at:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-07-25/cyber-attacks-on-activists-traced-to-finfisher-spyware-of-gamma.html.
Bahrain Watch would like to extend its gratitude to all of the activists, researchers, and journalists, including those at Bloomberg News, who contributed to this story.
Have I Been Infected?
The malicious e-mails analyzed were sent from the following addresses:
melissa.aljazeera@gmail.com
freedombhrtoday@gmail.com
mkhalil1975@gmail.com
The malicious e-mails analyzed had the following subject lines:
Existence of a new dialogue – Al-Wefaq & Government authority
Torture reports on Nabeel Rajab
King Hamad planning
Breaking News from Bahrain – 5 Suspects Arrested
The malicious attachments display images or documents when opened. If you have received e-mails with these subject lines or from these addresses, DO NOT OPEN THE ATTACHMENTS. If you opened one of the attachments, your computer may be infected. STOP USING THE INFECTED COMPUTER IMMEDIATELY.
If you have received these e-mails, or any other suspicious e-mail about Bahrain with an attachment, please contact bill@bahrainwatch.org with details.
Tips for Safe Internet Usage
Do not open unsolicited attachments received via email, Skype or any other communications mechanism. If you believe that you are being targeted, be especially cautious when downloading files over the Internet, even from links that are purportedly sent by friends. .…source
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Bahrain Regime denies murderous misuse of Chemical Gas
Watch Bahrain Police NOT fire Chemical Gas directly into Home
Bahrain slams tear gas death claims
9 August, 2012 – Trade Arabia
Bahrain has strongly denied claims that anyone has died or suffered serious injuries as a result of tear gas, with the Information Affairs Authority (IAA) saying there was no evidence to prove the tear gas used by police was lethal.
‘Any means that have been exercised by security forces adhere to international standards of riot control,’ said a spokesman.
A recent report by the US-based Physicians for Human Rights (PHR) organisation alleged it had resulted in the ‘maiming, blinding and even killing of protesters’.
‘It is increasingly evident that tear gas has effects far more severe than commonly understood,’ said its deputy director Richard Sollom.
‘Suggestions that the use of tear gas in Bahrain is severely injurious or even lethal are simply not backed up by any research or proof,” the spokesman said.
‘The government of Bahrain denies and condemns the use of lethal force or unlawful means in controlling demonstrations in the kingdom.’
The IAA said it was also important to consider the situation faced by the security forces when they are forced to resort to using tear gas.
‘Where there has been a response by the Interior Ministry, it is in response to illegal, violent or disruptive acts being committed and has no bearing on what the person committing the acts believes in or which community he or she belongs to,’ said the spokesman.
‘The disruptions to others’ lives and economic interests are not acceptable and it is the government’s responsibility to create a safe environment for both of those to survive.’
The spokesman said while the United Nation’s International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights recognised the right of people to protest in states they must conform with the law in the ‘interests of national security or public safety, public order/or the protection of the rights and freedom of others’.
Injured
‘It is imperative to establish that any allegations regarding the use of force are taken very seriously,’ he said. …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Saudi Security Forces abduct child in Qatif – taken to unknown location
Shia Child from Qatif Abducted by Saudi Security Forces
shiapost – 9 August, 2012
On Sunday August 5, 2012, the security forces at the check-point of al-Nasera in Qatif abducted the Shia child “Mustafa Abdul Wahid al-Jamid “.
Mustafa al-Jamid passed in front of al-Nasera check-point when some security members called him and picked him up in a police squad and then driven to an unknown location.
Mustafa’s parents are waiting to hear any news about him , and no one gave them justification for his abduction . …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Egypt Military signs-up to do Israel’s ‘drity work’ in Sinai
Clashes continue in Egypt’s Sinai
9 August, 2012 – Al Akhbar
Egyptian police and gunmen traded fire in the Sinai town of El-Arish on Thursday as security forces pressed an unprecedented campaign to quell Islamist militants, state television reported.
The state-owned Nile News television reported that the clashes were taking place outside a police station in the north Sinai town, a day after reported airstrikes killed 20 militants in a neighboring village.
The fighting comes a day after the Egyptian army declared success in the campaign against militants in Sinai.
“Elements from the armed forces and interior ministry supported by the air force began a plan to restore security by pursuing and targeting armed terrorist elements in Sinai, and it has accomplished this task with complete success,” the military said in a statement on Wednesday.
The statement also added that the military would continue its campaign, without elaborating.
The clashes come after a militant attack on Sunday killed 16 Egyptian soldiers in an attempt to infiltrate Israel.
The soldiers were killed when the militants raided a border guard base under the cover of mortar fire, and commandeered a military vehicle into Israel before they were stopped by an Israeli helicopter strike.
Israel stepped up pressure on Egypt’s government to get a grip on lawlessness near the border, despite Egypt requiring Israeli permission to send forces to the Sinai region.
A 1979 peace treaty between the two states prohibits Egypt from deploying a large military presence in the Sinai, restricting Cairo’s ability to deal with rogue militants.
Israel granted Egypt permission following Sunday’s attack to deploy larger forces in the region to strike the militants.
But the Sinai attacks prompted Egypt’s powerful Muslim Brotherhood to call for a review of the treaty with Israel to allow Egypt to deploy forces in the region at its will.
The Brotherhood blamed Israel’s Mossad for the attack, a charge denied by the Jewish state. …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Two fifteen year olds held for attending protest in Bahrain
Bahrain: Two boys among those held after protest
7 August, 2012 – Amnesty International
URGENT ACTION
TWO BOYS AMONG THOSE HELD AFTER PROTEST
Two men and two boys under the age of 18 are currently held in a prison in Bahrain after they participated in a protest. None had access to family members until nearly 48 hours after their arrest.
Jehad Sadeq Aziz Salman (15), Ebrahim Ahmed Radi al-Moqdad (15), Naser Saeed Hassan (20) and Hassan Abdul Jalil al-Ekri (20) were arrested on 23 July 2012 during an anti-government protest in Bilad al-Qadeem, west of Manama, the capital of Bahrain. After their arrest, they were first taken to a police station in Gudaibiya neighbourhood in Manama; then to the Criminal Investigation Department for interrogation, before being taken to the Public Prosecutor Office for further questioning. They were not allowed to speak to their families or to contact lawyers until nearly 48 hours after the arrest, and there was no lawyer present during their interrogation. They finally called their families nearly 48 hours after their arrest to inform them where they were being held.
All four are currently held in the Dry Dock prison in Manama and their detention has been extended until 23 September 2012. They have been charged with rioting and “illegal gathering”. They have now had access to their families although some of them have not seen their lawyers yet. At least one of the juveniles told his family he was participating in a peaceful protest. If some or all are held solely for the peaceful exercise of their right to freedom of assembly, they should be released immediately and unconditionally.
The age of criminal responsibility in Bahraini law is 15 years old. However being under 18, Jehad Sadeq Aziz Salman and Ebrahim Ahmed Radi al-Moqdad are children and should be exposed only to Bahrain’s Juvenile Justice system and not the regular criminal justice system. The Committee on the Rights of the Child has stated that ‘every person under the age of 18 years at the time of the alleged commission of an offence must be treated in accordance with the rules of juvenile justice’ (CRC General Comment No. 10,CRC/C/GC/10, 2007, paragraph 37). According to international standards on detention, young prisoners should be kept separate from adults.
Please write immediately in English or Arabic:
Express concern that Jehad Sadeq Aziz Salman and Ebrahim Ahmed Radi al-Moqdad are being treated as adults despite being under the age of 18; and urge the authorities to ensure that they are treated in accordance with the rules of juvenile justice, particularly with respect to their detention and any proceedings against them;
Urge the Bahraini authorities to allow all four detainees immediate access to their lawyers;
Urge them to release all four immediately and unconditionally, if they are only held solely for exercising their right to freedom of expression. …more
August 9, 2012 No Comments
Moscow rises to meet the challenge of silence on Bahrain
Moscow include Bahrain revolution on the agenda of the Security Council
9 August, 2012 – Shafaqna
SHAFAQNA (Shia International News Association) — Diplomatic sources said that the UN representative of Russia in the Security Council suggested the crisis of Bahrain on the agenda of the UN Security Council. The Russian representative proposal will be a surprise move to America, Britain and France who will oppose to put the crisis of Bahrain on the agenda of the Security Council.
These sources explained that Moscow’s proposal to shows the new approach of Russia in dealing with crises in the Middle East, without double standards.
Meanwhile the representative of China said earlier that the double standards of UN Security Council dealing in crises has damaged the credibility of the Council by world public opinion.
It is known that America, Britain and France pushed the UN Security Council to convene a hundred times to discuss the situation in Syria as these countries kept silent about the ongoing repression and murder against the Bahraini people a year and a half. …source
August 9, 2012 No Comments