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Weekly Security Brief - September 30th

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Weekly Security Brief - September 30th Empty Weekly Security Brief - September 30th

Post by Sabre 30/9/2014, 22:50

Weekly Security Brief - September 30th Dilita23








Dilitas Weekly Security Brief

This email has been compiled from current, open source data supplied through contacts within Diplomatic Posts, law enforcement agencies and UK intelligence services.
 The information herein is to keep you informed of the current security situations within the UK and the rest of the world. 
If you require more specific information on any other prevailing matters, please contact us at info@dilitas.com detailing what you require and we will respond to you.
Regards,
Christopher Cully
Managing Director


The threat to the UK from International Terrorism is SEVERE
The threat to Great Britain from Irish Republican Terrorism is MODERATE



Domestic:
David Cameron has defended efforts to combat Islamic State (IS) militants in Iraq using air strikes, saying the UK's military approach is not "simplistic". The prime minister told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show that air strikes were "part of a comprehensive strategy". Some commentators have suggested ground troops would also be necessary. RAF jets have begun carrying out combat missions over Iraq after Parliament voted by 524 votes to 43 to take action against IS in Iraq. The UK's military presence is part of a US-led coalition of about 40 countries, including Arab states, that has vowed to destroy IS, which controls large parts of north-eastern Syria and northern Iraq. At least two British hostages are thought to be being held by the group - journalist John Cantlie and taxi driver Alan Henning, who had been delivering humanitarian aid to Syria.
Police have arrested two more men on the M6 near Rugby in Warwickshire as part of an investigation into Islamist-related terrorism. A 33-year-old and a 42-year-old are being held at a police station in London following their arrest in the early hours of Friday morning. Nine others, including radical Islamic preacher Anjem Choudary, are in custody after being arrested on Thursday. Searches are continuing at 18 addresses in London and one in Stoke.
A man has been charged with conspiracy to murder in relation to several improvised explosive devices (IEDs) found in Iraq in 2007. Anis Abid Sardar, 37, was arrested at his home in north-west London on Tuesday. Sardar is alleged to have conspired to use roadside IEDs to attack coalition forces in Iraq.
A 19-year-old from Brighton is believed to be the latest British jihadi to be killed in Syria. Sources say that Ibrahim Kamara, also known as Khalil al-Britani, died after a US air strike on Aleppo this week. Kamara travelled to Syria in February to fight for Jabhat al-Nusra, an al Qaeda affiliate.

Northern Ireland and Eire:

Families representing eight IRA men and a civilian who were killed by undercover soldiers in 1987 are to meet government officials in Belfast on Friday. The families want new inquests and access to withheld government material. The IRA men were shot dead by the SAS as they tried to bomb Loughgall police station in County Armagh. The civilian was caught in the gunfire. Earlier this month, Secretary of State Theresa Villliers denied claims that she was "blocking" fresh inquests.
A lorry and trailer have been damaged in a petrol bomb attack in Strabane, County Tyrone. It happened on the Knockroe Road in the town shortly after 22:00 BST on Thursday.
A former Northern Ireland secretary who served under Margaret Thatcher has said the IRA's violence worked. Lord Jim Prior was secretary of state in 1981 at the time of the hunger strikes when 10 republicans died in prison. Mrs Thatcher said the men were criminals and refused to grant concessions. But Lord Prior told a BBC documentary that she never really understood what the problem was.
Four men have been arrested after a tonne of cocaine with a street value of 80m euros (£63m) was seized off the south west coast of the Republic of Ireland. Irish authorities intercepted the shipment off the Cork coast on Tuesday. Detectives are preparing to question three men in Cork. A fourth man was later arrested in Leeds, West Yorkshire.
More than two cannabis factories are being discovered in Northern Ireland every week, police have said. One hundred and thirty cannabis factories were uncovered in Northern Ireland between April 2013 and March 2014. That was a 44% increase on the previous year. Since April of this year 49 factories have been found. The figures were released as police launched a campaign to help the public spot signs of such drugs factories.

International:

IS
US-led air strikes on Islamic State (IS) militants have destroyed four tanks and damaged another during a fourth night of bombardments in Syria. The Pentagon said it also carried out seven strikes on IS positions in Iraq, including one on the outskirts of the capital, Baghdad. The Danish government says it is sending seven F-16 fighter jets to join anti-IS operations - but only in Iraq.
On Friday, The US military has released footage and still photos of its air strikes on oil refineries controlled by Islamic State (IS) militants in eastern Syria. The raids, carried out by US, Saudi and UAE aircraft, targeted 12 refineries in Syria on a third night of air strikes against the militants.
Syrian militant group al-Nusra Front has denounced US-led air strikes as "a war against Islam". In an online statement, the al-Qaeda-linked group called on jihadists around the world to target Western and Arab countries involved. It comes as the US and other nations widened air strikes against Islamic State (IS) fighters in Iraq and Syria. A Syrian activist group said overnight strikes hit three local oilfields near the Syrian IS stronghold of Raqqa. The group, the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, also said one civilian was killed in a strike on a plastics factory on the outskirts of Raqqa.
President Barack Obama has acknowledged that US agencies underestimated the threat posed by the Islamist insurgency in Syria. In a frank TV interview, he said that al-Qaeda had been beaten in Iraq by US forces working with Sunni tribes. But they took advantage of the power vacuum in neighbouring Syria to emerge as Isis, later called Islamic State. Meanwhile, there has been fierce fighting to the west of the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani has blamed the rise of violent extremism in the Middle East on the West's "strategic blunders". Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly, Mr Rouhani said the solution for the crisis had to come from within the region. He also accused "certain intelligence agencies" of funding groups such as Islamic State (IS) in Syria and Iraq. World leaders are meeting at the UN in New York to discuss the threat of IS.
The FBI has identified the militant in the videos depicting the killings of two US journalists and a British aid worker, the agency's director has said. But James Comey says the FBI will not yet release the name of Islamic State fighter, so-called Jihadi John, who seemed to speak with a British accent. UK Foreign Minister Philip Hammond told CNN this week they were "getting warm" on the identity of the masked man.
The number of Europeans joining Islamist fighters in Syria and Iraq has risen to more than 3,000, the EU's anti-terrorism chief has told the BBC. Gilles de Kerchove also warned that Western air strikes would increase the risk of retaliatory attacks in Europe. US-led forces have launched nearly 200 air strikes against Islamic State (IS) militants in Iraq since August and on Monday began targeting IS in Syria.
Islamist terrorists released a video appearing to show the beheading of a kidnapped French tourist this week. Herve Gourdel, 55, was kidnapped on Sunday, one day after arriving at Djurdjura National Park for a hiking tour. The video appears to show members of Jund al Khilafa, an organisation linked to the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Mr Gourdel’s murder follows the French government’s rejection of an ultimatum to halt French involvement in air strikes in Iraq.
French President Francois Hollande has strongly condemned the beheading in Algeria of tourist Herve Gourdel by a jihadist group linked to Islamic State (IS) militants. The president described the killing as a "cruel and cowardly" act. He said that French air strikes which began on IS targets in Iraq last week would continue. Jund al-Khilafa killed Mr Gourdel, 55, after its deadline for France to halt air strikes on IS in Iraq ran out. Algeria said it would do everything possible to bring the killers to justice.
France has announced it will tighten security around transport and public places following the killing of a French hostage by jihadists in Algeria. It will also boost its support for Syrian opposition forces fighting Islamic State (IS) militants. The move was announced by the office of President Francois Hollande after a high-level emergency meeting.
US officials have said they have seen no evidence Islamic State militants were plotting to attack underground rail networks in the US and Paris. Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has said his intelligence officials had uncovered plans for such an attack. Speaking on the sidelines of the United Nations General Assembly, he said the details he received seemed credible.
Police in Cyprus have persuaded nearly 300 migrants, thought to be Syrian refugees, to disembark from the cruise ship that had rescued them. Police negotiators coaxed the migrants off the ship in the early hours of Friday, an official said, ending a stand-off that began on Thursday. The migrants were rescued at sea by cruise ship Salamis Filoxenia. Although 65 left the ship when it docked at Limassol, the rest reportedly insisted on being taken to Italy.
GAZA
Palestinian negotiators in Cairo say they have agreed a "comprehensive" deal for a national unity government to take responsibility for running Gaza. A cabinet backed by Hamas and Fatah, which dominates the Palestinian Authority, was unveiled in June. But the move was eclipsed by Israel's conflict with militant groups in Gaza.
AFGHAN
Taliban fighters have seized control of a strategic district in the Afghan province of Ghazni, officials say. Insurgents killed about 70 villagers after taking Ajrestan district late on Thursday night after a week of battle. A spokesman for the provincial governor said 15 people suspected of collaborating with authorities were beheaded, including women. The Taliban is active in many parts of Ghazni, an important gateway to the capital, Kabul, from the south-east.
Afghan President-elect Ashraf Ghani is set to be inaugurated in a ceremony at the presidential palace in Kabul. It comes after six months of deadlock amid a bitter dispute over electoral fraud and a recount of votes. Under a US-brokered unity deal Mr Ghani got the presidency and runner-up Abdullah Abdullah can nominate a figure with prime-ministerial powers. The Taliban have described the deal as a "US-orchestrated sham" but Mr Ghani hailed it as a "big victory".
UKRAINE
Nationalists have torn down a statue of Lenin in the centre of Ukraine's second-largest city, Kharkiv, in a move supported by officials. People cheered and leapt for joy as the statue came crashing down. Pro-Russian demonstrators in the largely Russian-speaking city defended the statue in February, when President Viktor Yanukovych was ousted. Kharkiv escaped the violent unrest which swept through east Ukraine's other regions, Donetsk and Luhansk. A fragile ceasefire has been in place for weeks between pro-Russian separatists in those two regions.
Hungary's gas pipeline operator, FGSZ, says it has suspended delivery of gas to neighbouring Ukraine "indefinitely". Ukraine has been receiving gas from Hungary, Poland and Slovakia since Russia cut off supplies to Ukraine in June in a dispute over unpaid bills. Ukrainian state gas firm Naftogaz confirmed the stoppage, saying it was "unexpected and unexplained".
MALI
Minusma, the United Nations mission in Mali says five Chadian peacekeepers have been killed and another three wounded by an explosive device. The blast happened on the road between the towns of Aguelhok and Tessalit in the northern Kidal region. This attack brings the number of Minusma peacekeepers killed this month.
AFRICA
More than 260 Islamist militants have surrendered in north-eastern Nigeria, the military has said. Soldiers had also killed a man who featured in Boko Haram's propaganda videos pretending to be the group's leader Abubakar Shekau, it added. Last year, the military said that Shekau may have been killed, without providing any proof. Boko Haram has suffered heavy losses in recent weeks in battles in its stronghold of north-eastern Nigeria. The military said that 135 Boko Haram members surrendered with their weapons in Biu, Borno state, on Tuesday - and that 133 others surrendered elsewhere in north-eastern Nigeria.
Nigeria's MPs are investigating how $9.3m (£5.7m) of government money ended up on a private jet in South Africa. Senate defence committee chairman Thompson Sekibo made the disclosure after a closed-door meeting with security chiefs. South African authorities seized the cash from two Nigerians and an Israeli at an airport earlier this month. A PR firm working for the Nigerian government says the money was for a legitimate arms deal. The money, in $100 bills, had been stashed in three suitcases when customs officials at Johannesburg's Lanseria airport seized it from the two Nigerians and Israeli. They were not charged. The authorities in Kenya have closed a madrassa - or religious school - for teaching radical Islamic ideologies. The school in Machakos, about 65km (40 miles) east of Nairobi, was targeted after local youths were detained on suspicion of joining Somali militants. It is the first Kenyan madrassa to be closed because of allegedly extremist teachings. A police chief warned that others could follow. Somalia's al-Shabab group has carried out a series of attacks in Kenya.
HONG KONG
Hong Kong police have used tear gas to disperse thousands of pro-democracy protesters near the government complex, after a week of escalating tensions. Hundreds of demonstrators remained in the city centre on Sunday evening. Protesters want the Chinese government to scrap rules allowing it to vet Hong Kong's top leader in the 2017 poll.
CHINA
Fifty people died in violence last Sunday in Xinjiang, Chinese state media said, in what police called a "serious terrorist attack". Earlier this week state media reported the incident in Luntai county but gave the death toll as two. On Thursday a state news portal said 40 "rioters", six civilians and four police officers were killed. No reason was given for the delay in reporting. Violence has been escalating in Xinjiang in recent months. The region in China's far west is home to the Muslim Uighur minority group. Tensions exist between the Uighur community and the Han Chinese.
India and China have agreed to pull back troops after talks to end a two-week stand-off near their de facto border, India's foreign minister says. Sushma Swaraj said the soldiers would withdraw from the area by Tuesday. India said Chinese soldiers had been seen trying to construct a temporary road inside Indian territory in the Ladakh region, reports said. The two countries dispute several Himalayan border areas and fought a brief war in 1962.
UZBEKISTAN
Political prisoners in Uzbekistan suffer "unspeakable abuses", including torture and abysmal jail conditions according to Human Rights Watch. A new report says that activists, journalists and government critics are locked up for years and often have their sentences extended arbitrarily. The Uzbek authorities say there are no political prisoners in the country and that torture is being eliminated.
JORDAN
Radical Muslim cleric Abu Qatada has been released from prison after being found not guilty of terrorism offences by a court in Amman, Jordan. Judges said there was "insufficient evidence" to convict him of planning a thwarted terrorist plot against tourists and diplomats during Jordan's Millennium celebrations. He was deported from the UK in 2013. Britain's Home Office said he was "not coming back to the UK" as its courts agreed he was a threat to security.
AUSTRALIA
A terrorism subject stabbed two police officers at a Melbourne police station, before being shot dead by one of the officers, on Tuesday. Abdul Numan Haider, 18, had attended Endeavour Hills police station by appointment to meet with counter- terrorism officers. Both officers required surgery.
EBOLA
Liberia's chief medical officer has put herself under quarantine for 21 days, after one of her assistants died from the deadly Ebola virus. Bernice Dahn, a deputy health minister, said she had no symptoms but wanted to take every precaution.
Sierra Leone's President Ernest Bai Koroma has widened a quarantine to include another one million people in an attempt to curb the spread of Ebola. The northern districts of Port Loko and Bombali, and Moyamba in the south, will in effect be sealed off immediately. Nearly 600 people have died of the virus in Sierra Leone where two eastern districts are already blockaded.
The Ebola outbreak threatens to become a political crisis that could unravel years of effort to stabilise West Africa, a think tank has warned. "The worst-hit countries now face widespread chaos and, potentially, collapse," the International Crisis Group (ICG) said. The world's largest outbreak of Ebola has caused 2,811 deaths so far, mainly in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
MEXICO
A Mexican court has ordered the release of Martin Beltran Coronel, who had been charged with organised crime. The court said due process had been violated. Mr Beltran Coronel, who is the nephew of the late drug lord Nacho Coronel, was arrested on 12 May 2011. The court said statements by witnesses had been "induced" and Mr Beltran Coronel's right to being considered innocent until proven guilty had been breached. Four of his co-accused were also released.
The Mexican authorities say one of two burned bodies found in a car in the central state of Zacatecas is that of a federal Congressman abducted on Monday. Gabriel Gomez Michel, a member of the Chamber of Deputies for the governing PRI party, had been kidnapped south of the city of Guadalajara. Prosecutors said the second body was that of Mr Gomez's driver, Heriberto Nunez Ramos. PRI politicians said they suspected a criminal gang was behind the murder.
US
The number of people killed or wounded in mass shootings in the US has increased dramatically in recent years, an FBI study has found. More than 480 were killed and 557 wounded in 160 "active shooter" incidents from 2000-13, it found. Two-thirds of incidents ended before police arrived, though only one ended when an armed citizen not working as a security guard responded with gunfire. The study was prompted by the 2012 massacre at a Connecticut school.
NORTH KOREA
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has an unspecified medical problem, state media report, after he failed to appear at a key political event. A report on state television said on Thursday that Mr Kim, 31, was in an "uncomfortable physical condition" but gave no details. Earlier, the leader was absent from a session of the Supreme People's Assembly - North Korea's legislature. Mr Kim has not been seen in public for more than three weeks.
FLIGHT MH370
The team looking for missing flight MH370, flying from the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, to Beijing has released detailed images of the seabed - revealing features such as extinct volcanoes and 1,400-metre depressions for the first time. The collection of data from one of the most secret parts of the world is a by-product of the search. The Malaysian Airlines plane vanished without trace on 8 March with 239 people on board. Twenty-six countries have helped look for the Boeing 777, but nothing has ever been found.
GREECE
Police in northern Greece say they are investigating reports that a woman woke up to find herself buried in a coffin, only to die before being rescued. Several people visiting the cemetery, near Thessaloniki, told police they had heard banging and muffled shouting from inside the woman's grave, an hour after her funeral on Thursday. By the time the coffin was dug up, the woman, 45, was found dead. She had earlier been declared dead by doctors treating her for cancer.
SUDAN
Mariam Ibrahim, the Sudan woman who escaped a death sentence imposed for renouncing her faith, says she wants to campaign for others who face religious persecution. Speaking to the BBC in the US, where she is seeking asylum, Ms Ibrahim said she hopes to return to Sudan one day. Ms Ibrahim earlier received an award from a US Christian foundation.

Cyber Issues:
A series of attacks on websites and servers using the serious Shellshock bug has been spotted. Millions of servers use software vulnerable to the bug, which lets attackers run commands on that system. So far, thousands of servers have been compromised via Shellshock and some have been used to bombard web firms with data, said experts. The number of attacks and compromises was likely to grow as the code used to exploit the bug was shared. The Shellshock bug was discovered in a tool known as Bash that is widely used by the Unix operating system and many of its variants, including Linux open source software and Apple's OSX.
The European Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) says electronic devices such as mobile phones can be left switched on during flights. EASA says that electronic devices do not pose a safety risk. The announcement clears the way for airlines to permit the use of mobile phones, once they have conducted their own safety reviews. Currently airline passengers have to switch devices to flight mode and make calls from the airport terminal. The EASA sets the framework for airlines making safety decisions.

Significant Forthcoming Anniversaries:
1 Oct 2001 Prime Minister Blair declared war on Afghanistan.
1 Oct 2005 Bali: Resort bombings kill 26 and injure more than 100.
1 Oct 1995 Sheikh Umar Abd al-Rahman convicted in plot to blow up UN Headquarters and other landmarks in New York
 3 Oct 1990 Unification of East and West Germany
3 Oct 2014 Islamic: Al-Hajj, the Pilgramage, begins (ends 7 October 2014)
5 Oct 2010 Faisal Shahzad convicted, sentenced to life imprisonment, for role in failed vehicle bombing in Times Square, New York City
 6 Oct 2002 The French oil tanker Limberg is attacked and damaged in the Gulf of Aden. One dead. Al-Qaeda blamed.
 6 Oct 1981 Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was assassinated during a military parade by Egyptian Islamic Jihad
 6 Oct 1973 Yom Kippur War begins.
7 Oct 2004 Terrorists car-bomb Hilton resort in Taba, Egypt, and two other tourist areas. 34 people killed, more than 100 wounded.
 7 Oct 2001 The US-led coalition begins its military campaign in Afghanistan in response to 9/11 attacks
 7 Oct 1985 Hijacking of Achille Lauro cruise ship in which one US citizen is murdered.
 12 Oct 2000 Seaborne suicide bombing of the USS Cole of Yemen kills 17 US Naval personnel.
 12 Oct 2002 Multiple car bombs explode outside nightclubs in Bali, Indonesia, killing 202.
 12 Oct 1984 The attempted murder of Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher by the Provisional IRA detonating a bomb at the Grand Hotel in Brighton during Conservative Party conference. Five people were killed in the attack.
 13 Oct Columbus Day. Public holiday in US
15 Oct 2003 Palestinian militants bomb a U.S. Embassy motorcade in the Gaza Strip killing three diplomatic security contractors.
 17 Oct 1995 Suspected Algerian Islamists (GIA) bomb the Paris Metro wounding 30
 19 Oct 1983 U.S. troops invade Grenada.
23 Oct 1983 In Lebanon, Islamic Jihad mount a VBIED attack on a U.S. Marines (and French paratroopers) barracks in Beirut killing 241 U.S. Marines and 58 paratroopers.
 23 Oct 2002 Moscow theater siege begins. 50 Chechen extremist take over theater with 800 hostages. In a military resolution by Russian SF, 124 hostages (including one American), and all the Chechen hostage takers, are killed.
 23 Oct 1998 Israel and the Palestinian Authority sign a peace deal at Wye River, Maryland, USA
 24 Oct 1945 United Nations formerly established
25 Oct 2014 First of Muharram - Islamic New Year
26 Oct 1988 Publication by Penguin books of Salman Rushdie’s ‘The Satanic Verses’.
 26 Oct 1994 Jordan and Israel sign peace accord.
26 Oct 2001 The USA PATRIOT Act is signed into law by President Bush – Background
 26 Oct 2014 British Summer Time ends. Clocks in the UK go back one hour. (In U.S., Daylight Saving Time ends 3 November 2011)
 27 Oct 1947 Indian occupation of Kashmir.
28 Oct 2002 USAID official Laurence Foley is murdered in Amman, Jordan
29 Oct 2005 Bombings in New Delhi, India, kill 55, wound close to 200. A radical Islamist group claimed responsibility
 29 Oct 1975 West Germany: Three Black September terrorists hijack Lufthansa plane and demand release of jailed terrorists involved in the 1972 Munich Olympic Games massacre.
 31 Oct 1984 India’s Prime Minister Indira Gandhi is assassinated by her Sikh bodyguards.
 31Oct 2014 Halloween
2 Nov 1922 Balfour declaration leading to the creation of an Israeli State
3 Nov 2001 A 60lb vehicle bomb left outside Birmingham rail station is made safe. Blamed on Irish republican dissidents, this is the last recorded terrorist incident linked to Northern Ireland to have occurred on mainland UK.
 4 Nov 1979 U.S. Embassy in Tehran seized, 66 taken hostage
4 Nov 1995 Assassination of Israeli Prime Minister, Yitzak Rabin.
6 Nov 2012 Election Day (U.S.)
9 Nov 2005 Three near simultaneous bombs function at Western hotels in Amman, Jordan killing 50 and injuring 110. Al-Qaeda in Iraq claims credit.
 9 Nov 2003 18 people are killed in an attack on a Riyadh residential compound mounted by Saudi al-Qaeda members.
 9 Nov 1938 ‘Kristalnach’ – Night of the broken glass when Nazi’s in Germany took action against the Jews.
 12 Nov 1997 Pakistan: Four U.S. nationals and their Pakistani driver are murdered in a Karachi ambush
 13 Nov 1995 Saudi Arabia: A VBIED at a U.S. military advisors facility in Riyadh kills 7 people and injures 60 others.
 13 Nov 1988 Palestinian National Council recognizes Israel
14 Nov 1948 Birthday of HRH The Prince of Wales – Gun salutes in Hyde Park
15 Nov 1988 Palestinian symbolic day of Independence
17 Nov 1997 Egypt: Al Gama al’Islamiya attacks tourists in Luxor killing 71 people.
 17 Nov 1973 Student uprising in Greece results in police killing 34 students. The November 17 terrorist group in Greece takes its name from this event.
 20 Nov 2003 Turkey: Near simultaneous vehicle borne IED’s function at the gates of the British Consulate in Istanbul and at the British HSBC Bank killing 30 people. Al Qaeda blamed for the attack.
 22 Nov 1963 Assassination of President John F. Kennedy in Dallas, Texas.
23 Nov 1996 Hijacked Ethiopian airliner crashes into sea in Comoros Islands killing 127 people, one of whom was an American national.
 25 Nov 1984 The U.S. Embassy in Portugal is hit by four mortar rounds – blamed on the domestic terrorist group, FP25
 26 Nov 2008 Terrorists attack several sites in Mumbai; sieges end three days later with more than 170 dead and 300 wounded; surviving attacker says LT responsible
 27 Nov 1978 Founding day of the Kurdish extremist group, the PKK.
28 Nov 2002 Kenya: Three suicide bombers mount an attack on the Paradise Hotel in Mombasa killing 15 people. Al-Qaeda blamed.
 29 Nov 1987 Korean Airlines flight 858 is sabotaged by two North Korean agents over the Adaman Sea killing all 115 passengers and crew.
 29 Nov 1947 UN Resolution that partitions Palestine. Now designated as the International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People.

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