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Homeland Security News

A collection of open-source homeland security and terrorism news from around the world.
Date: May 23, 2014

Egyptian security officials say a key leader of a militant group has been shot dead in the Sinai peninsula.  Shadi el-Menei was the purported head of Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, suspected of a string of recent attacks.

Several other members of the al-Qaeda-inspired group were said to have been killed but this has not been confirmed.

The deaths of more than 200 Egyptian soldiers and officials have been blamed on Ansar Beit al-Maqdis since President Mohammed Morsi was ousted in July 2013.

Read More:  BBC News

The UN Security Council has approved sanctions against the Nigerian militant group Boko Haram, five weeks after it kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls.  It will now be added to a list of al-Qaeda-linked organisations subject to an arms embargo and asset freeze.

US envoy Samantha Power said it was an "important step" in support of efforts to "defeat Boko Haram and hold its murderous leadership accountable".  Analysts say it is hard to say what practical effect the move will have.

Boko Haram was earlier blamed for the deaths of 27 people in a north-eastern village.

Read More:  BBC News

Five suicide bombers carried out the attack which killed 31 people in the capital of China's troubled Xinjiang region, state media reported a day after the deadliest terrorist attack to date in the region.  The incident, which occurred in Urumqi on Thursday morning, was the second suicide attack in the capital in just over three weeks. A bomb and knife attack at an Urumqi train station in late April killed one bystander and wounded 79.

The government recently launched a campaign to strike hard against terrorism in Xinjiang, blaming Islamists and separatists for the worsening violence in the resource-rich western region bordering central Asia. At least 180 people have been killed in attacks across China over the past year.

The attackers ploughed two vehicles into an open market in Urumqi and hurled explosives. Many of the 94 people wounded were elderly shoppers, according to witnesses.  "Five suspects who participated in the violent terrorist attack blew themselves up," the Global Times, a tabloid run by the People's Daily, the official newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party, reported on Friday.

Read More:  Reuters