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TERROR WARS
Jordan, Saudi kings in talks as they battle IS
by Staff Writers
Riyadh (AFP) Dec 14, 2014


Tajik president calls Islamic State group a modern 'plague'
Dushanbe, Tajikistan (AFP) Dec 13, 2014 - The president of Tajikistan on Saturday called the Islamic State group a modern "plague", expressing concern that several hundred young people had left the ex-Soviet republic to fight with jihadists in Syria.

"The Islamic State is the plague of the new century and represents a threat for global security," said President Emomali Rakhmon at a party meeting, according to his press service.

The central Asian nation's security forces believe that more than 300 Tajiks have joined the fighting in Syria, with at least 50 killed so far.

"These young people, when they return home, bring instability to society," Rakhmon said.

"They are a threat for Tajikistan because they recruit for extremist groups in Syria and Iraq."

Majority-Muslim Tajikistan in November announced the arrest of 12 members of the outlawed Islamist group Jamaat Ansarullah on suspicion of enlisting would-be jihadists for Syria.

At the start of December, the government arrested 50 young militants who had been recruited to fight in Syria.

Islamists were deeply involved in a bloody five-year civil war in the secular country that ended in 1997.

Jordan's King Abdullah II met his Saudi counterpart in Riyadh Sunday for talks as both nations participate in a US-led bombing campaign against Islamic State group extremists in Syria.

The official Saudi Press Agency said King Abdullah received the Jordanian monarch at his palace.

Since September both kingdoms, along with Bahrain, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates, have been taking part in American-led air strikes against the IS jihadists in Syria.

Jordan's king warned this month that the fight against IS is a "third world war".

The group has declared a "caliphate" in parts of Syria and Iraq, the nation bordering both Jordan and Saudi Arabia.

IS militants have been accused of widespread atrocities, including beheading Western hostages.

Saudi involvement in the coalition has raised concerns about possible retaliation there, while analysts say Jordan has been placed in danger by joining the international effort.

"During the meeting they discussed overall events at the regional and international level," and how to strengthen bilateral ties, SPA said.

On Thursday Saudi Arabia said it had arrested three alleged IS supporters for shooting and wounding a Danish citizen in Riyadh.

In November, the kingdom blamed IS-linked suspects for killing seven members of the minority Shiite community.

Jordan, which shares a border with Syria as well as Iraq, is grappling with its own home-grown Islamist question.

It also hosts more than 600,000 Syrian refugees.


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