AMMAN (dpa): Jordanian officials have reported a rise in attempt to
smuggle guns into Syria amidst calls by local jihadists to send
mujahideen fighters to combat forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad.
According to security sources, Jordan has witnessed a rise in attempts to smuggle arms across the Jordanian-Syrian border, with border patrols reporting up to 10 attempts per week.
Jordanian official believe smugglers are using the kingdom as a “transit point” to supply weapons from Saudi Arabia to rebels in the restive southern region of Daraa – which has been the focus of a recent Syrian military crackdown.
“We are witnessing more attempt to smuggle weapons into Syria and also attempts to smuggle weapons into Jordan from neighboring countries that we believe are destined for Syria,” the source, which preferred to remain unnamed, told dpa.
Amman officially acknowledged the presence of an illegal arms trade on Wednesday, indicating that it has foiled “several” attempts by various groups to illicitly transport arms into its northern neighbor.
In a press conference late Wednesday, Public Security Department chief Hussein Majali stressed that Jordanian authorities are employing “all means” to safeguard the countries’ shared borders and rejects “all interference” in Damascus’s internal affairs.
The rise in arms smuggling attempts comes amidst calls for jihad by hard-line Jordanian Islamist groups.
Last month, Mohammed Abu Tahwai, a senior leader of the Jordanian jihadist Salafist movement, called on Arab and Islamic nations to send “weaponry, money and military experts” to “support Sunnis” in Syria in their struggle against the predominately Allawite regime of al-Assad.
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According to security sources, Jordan has witnessed a rise in attempts to smuggle arms across the Jordanian-Syrian border, with border patrols reporting up to 10 attempts per week.
Jordanian official believe smugglers are using the kingdom as a “transit point” to supply weapons from Saudi Arabia to rebels in the restive southern region of Daraa – which has been the focus of a recent Syrian military crackdown.
“We are witnessing more attempt to smuggle weapons into Syria and also attempts to smuggle weapons into Jordan from neighboring countries that we believe are destined for Syria,” the source, which preferred to remain unnamed, told dpa.
Amman officially acknowledged the presence of an illegal arms trade on Wednesday, indicating that it has foiled “several” attempts by various groups to illicitly transport arms into its northern neighbor.
In a press conference late Wednesday, Public Security Department chief Hussein Majali stressed that Jordanian authorities are employing “all means” to safeguard the countries’ shared borders and rejects “all interference” in Damascus’s internal affairs.
The rise in arms smuggling attempts comes amidst calls for jihad by hard-line Jordanian Islamist groups.
Last month, Mohammed Abu Tahwai, a senior leader of the Jordanian jihadist Salafist movement, called on Arab and Islamic nations to send “weaponry, money and military experts” to “support Sunnis” in Syria in their struggle against the predominately Allawite regime of al-Assad.
Read more...
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