
Pope Leo XIV urges all sides in Iran-Israel war to reject ‘bullying and arrogance' and talk peace
'Let us listen to this voice that comes from on High:' Leo said. 'Heal the lacerations caused by the bloody actions of recent days, reject all logic of bullying and revenge, and resolutely take the path of dialogue, diplomacy and peace.'
The Chicago-born Leo also expressed solidarity with the victims of Sunday's attack on a Greek Orthodox church in Damascus, Syria and urged the international community to keep supporting Syrian reconciliation. Syria's Interior Ministry has said a sleeper cell belonging to the Islamic State group was behind the attack at the Church of the Holy Cross in Damascus, which killed at least 25 people.
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'To the Christians in the Middle East, I am near you. All the church is close to you,' he said. 'This tragic event is a reminder of the profound fragility that still marks Syria after years of conflict and instability, and therefore it is crucial that the international community doesn't look away from this country, but continues to offer it support through gestures of solidarity and with a renewed commitment to peace and reconciliation.'
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New York Post
15 hours ago
- New York Post
Who'll end Christian slaughter, grad schools will survive loan caps and other commentary
Foreign desk: Who'll End Christian Slaughter? 'On Friday June 13, over 500 Christians' were murdered by Islamic terrorists in Nigeria, reports The Free Press' Madeleine Kearns. 'The jihadists broke into homes and shelters, murdering people with machetes,' then 'doused their victims' bodies and homes in petrol and set them ablaze.' And, 'though exceptional in scale and barbarity,' it's just 'part of a pattern of persecution that Christians in Nigeria have come to expect.' Consider: 'Since 2009, Islamists' across Nigeria 'have destroyed over 18,000 churches,' 'murdered over 50,000 Christians' and displaced 'a further 5 million Christians.' Yet Western governments and media 'have turned away from the issue.' Will anyone move to stop the carnage? Libertarian: Grad Schools Will Survive Loan Caps Advertisement A provision in the Republican Big Beautiful Bill 'may make considerable inroads to correcting a decades-long student loan policy that has driven expensive programs and large debt burdens for students,' cheers Reason's Emma Camp. The House bill 'eliminates the Graduate PLUS loan program, which allows graduate students to borrow an unlimited sum of money from the government,' instead capping grad-student borrowing at $100,000, 'with a $150,000 limit for professional programs, and a lifetime cap of $200,000 for all students.' These caps could 'force colleges to lower their prices once their students no longer have access to an infinite pile of government money.' Indeed, If we want more affordable medical schools, 'the first step should involve actually incentivizing medical schools to stop overcharging students.' Conservative: Dems' NYC-led Coastal Elitism 'One interesting aspect of the rise of' socialist Democratic mayoral nominee Zohran Mamdani 'is what it says about New York City's dominance of national Democratic politics at this moment,' muses the Washington Examiner's Byron York. 'The New York contingent essentially is the leadership of the Democratic Party today,' since congressional leaders Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer as well as stars Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Bernie Sanders are all current or former New Yorkers. 'After the 2024 election, Democratic pollster Mark Penn wrote that Trump was elected by 'Americans who feel abandoned by the coastal elites and a Democratic Party that moved too far from mainstream America.'' 'There are probably a lot of things Democrats might do to broaden their appeal beyond the coastal areas, but' elevating Mamdani 'is definitely not one of them.' Advertisement Antisemitism beat: 'Kosherizing' Jew-Haters Just before New York's mayoral primary, late-night host Stephen Colbert's guests were Zohran Mamdani and City comptroller Brad Lander, notes Commentary's Seth Mandel. 'All three were there' to 'help elect Zohran Mamdani mayor.' Mamdani — 'the poster child for progressive anti-Zionism's conquest of the mainstream Democratic Party' — had defended the phrase 'globalize the intifada,' which calls for violence against Jews, and 'Colbert can be effective at shielding left-wing anti-Semites from criticism.' Then again, the TV host doesn't 'hold a candle in that department to Brad Lander': Indeed, the comptroller's 'alliance with Mamdani' is the 'culmination of years of Lander's efforts to kosherize anti-Semitism.' He's part of the story of 'the collapse of New York's Jewish-political establishment.' Sen. Chuck Schumer, who kissed 'Mamdani's ring,' is 'the capstone of this project.' From the right: Lefties' Chronic Mental Misery Advertisement Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas) 'said last week that Donald Trump supporters are mentally ill,' but 'it's her side that is not well,' snarks the Issues & Insights editorial board. 'Nine in 10 conservatives self-report their mental health to be excellent (51%)' versus only 20% of liberals. Meanwhile, 'only 19% of conservatives say their mental health is poor, while 45% of liberals say they have poor mental health.' 'This is not a new development related to Trump returning to the White House. A decade ago, University of Toronto researchers similarly 'found that conservatives are more emotionally stable than liberals.' 'Democrats, progressives, socialists, anti-capitalists, and the rest who reside under the leftist umbrella are unhappy, and they want everyone else to be just as miserable as they are.' — Compiled by The Post Editorial Board
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Chicago man convicted of helping Islamic State spread violent message, encourage terrorist attacks
Nearly seven years after the feds raided his Northwest Side home, a Chicago IT specialist was convicted Friday of helping the Islamic State terrorist group through a media campaign that encouraged attacks, celebrated beheadings and other gruesome violence and taunted Western culture with memes like a headless Santa delivering a bomb. U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey issued his verdict following a rare bench trial that began last month, convicting Ashraf al Safoo on 11 counts, including providing material support to a terrorist organization, conspiracy to transmit threats in interstate commerce, and computer fraud. Al Safoo faces up to 130 years behind bars when he's sentenced on Oct. 9. In his brief ruling from the bench, Blakey called the evidence at trial 'overwhelming.' The judge did, however, acquit al Safoo on a lone count involving $400 he'd wired to an Islamic State member in 2018, ruling that the evidence was insufficient that al Safoo knew of the recipient's status in the organization, also known as ISIS. Dressed in orange jail clothes, al Safoo, 41, kept his hands clasped behind him and did not react as the judge announced his ruling. Blakey said he will issue a more lengthy written opinion explaining his verdicts at a later date. After the hearing, U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros released a statement saying the case was 'a testament to the vigilance and dedication of our prosecutors and law enforcement partners who stand watch to disrupt and prevent dangerous threats before they materialize.' 'We will vigorously pursue and bring to justice those who provide material support — in whatever form — to terrorist organizations,' Boutros said. Al Safoo's attorney could not immediately be reached. Blakey's verdict turns the page in a long-running case beset by numerous delays as al Safoo changed legal teams and challenged some of the key evidence against him, including the testimony of convicted ISIS member Yasir al Anzi, who was captured in 2019 by U.S. forces in Iraq and is serving a sentence there of 20 years to life. At the time al Safoo was arrested in October 2018 at his home in the Budlong Woods neighborhood, the Islamic State was still considered one of the world's greatest terrorist threats, even though its caliphate had crumbled and the group had lost nearly all the territory it had seized in Iraq and Syria. Thousands of ISIS fighters were killed in the process and thousands more remain in prison. Despite its decline, however, U.S. officials have said the group still has an active core of battle-hardened militants, many operating in sleeper cells, and other terrorists groups remain loyal to the Islamic State's causes and are capable of striking on its behalf. In the charges, prosecutors alleged that although al Safoo was not a sworn ISIS member, he was a leader of a group called Khattab Media Foundation, an internet-based propaganda organization that swore an oath of allegiance to the Islamic State. 'Brothers, roll up your sleeves!' al Safoo allegedly posted in one Khattab-related forum in May 2018. 'Cut video publications into small clips, take still shots, and post the hard work of your brothers in the apostate's pages and sites. Participate in the war, and spread fear.' Authorities said the foundation ran like a well-oiled public relations firm, with writers, editors, tech advisers and audiovisual producers all pushing a central message of fear, violence and death. To accomplish his goals, al Safoo and his co-conspirators hacked legitimate social media accounts to make it seem like the messages were coming from actual users and to make it harder for platforms such as Twitter, now known as X, to take them down. When mistakes were made, employees were reprimanded, according to a criminal complaint unsealed against al Safoo in 2018. At one point, an editor sent out an officewide note about an embarrassing gaffe on a design featuring President Donald Trump that a member had mistranslated from Arabic using a Google app, the complaint stated. 'Instead of writing 'beheading' Trump, he wrote 'kissing and hugging' Trump,' the federal charges quoted the memo as saying. 'The Americans started laughing at the Islamic State. The image has circulated and it became a joke.' The charges alleged the Khattab group regularly promoted ISIS-inspired attacks, including the December 2017 shooting at a church in Egypt that killed nine people. But it also highlighted violence in the U.S. that was not connected to the terrorist group. The day after a gunman opened fire on concertgoers in Las Vegas in October 2017, killing 59, the media group called it a 'blessed operation … executed by one of the soldiers of the Caliphate,' according to the complaint. According to evidence at trial, after al Safoo's arrest, Khattab was responsible for an internet post calling for the beheading of then-Chicago FBI Special Agent in Charge Jeffrey Sallett. Al Safoo was not accused of playing a role in that post. In his closing argument to Blakey earlier this month, Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Peabody challenged the assertion of al Safoo's attorneys that what he was posting was protected First Amendment speech, saying al Safoo was 'not just repeating Islamic State propaganda' but 'dressing it up, lots of guns and fire and destruction, ready for distribution.' 'Media was the key. It was how the Islamic State grew and gained followers,' Peabody said. 'It's how they recruited fighters, it's how they inspired lone wolf attacks. And it was how they got their message out.' Al Safoo's attorney, James Vanzant, said in his closing remarks that much of the content his client put out was just 'repackaged' material from news reports already online. Other things were just plain silly, he said, pointing to the infographic posted by al Safoo's group depicting a headless Santa Claus delivering a package that contained a bomb and the words 'Our gifts are ready.' 'A lot of this stuff is juvenile…I've seen worse than this on Xbox chats,' Vanzant said. 'I don't know… Can we threaten Santa Claus? I guess we have a war on Christmas. But this is not a real threat…It's tasteless. I don't like looking at it but that doesn't matter. They have a right to say it.' A key portion of the prosecution's evidence focused on the videotaped testimony of al Anzi, a leader in the Islamic State's propaganda operation convicted in Iraqi courts. Al-Anzi sat for a sworn deposition several years ago in a courthouse in Bagdad, where he testified about his communications with Safoo. Dressed in a yellow jail outfit and speaking through an interpreter, al Anzi testified that Safoo, whom he knew as Abu Al-Iraqi, was affiliated with Khattab Media Foundation and that he had online communications with him about conducting a terrorist operation in Illinois, thought he could not remember specifics on the exact target. Al Safoo also sent the $400 to him, al Anzi testified, but he was clear that he wanted it to go to help refugee families who were starving in Syria at the time. Al Anzi said the money was indeed spent on medicine for one family and for food for another. A former web developer and internet technology specialist, al Safoo holds a masters degree in computer sciences and had been living in the U.S for about 10 years before his arrest. He's since been held in custody at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Chicago. jmeisner@


Chicago Tribune
17 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Chicago man convicted of helping Islamic State spread violent message, encourage terrorist attacks
Nearly seven years after the feds raided his Northwest Side home, a Chicago IT specialist was convicted Friday of helping the Islamic State terrorist group through a media campaign that encouraged attacks, celebrated beheadings and other gruesome violence and taunted Western culture with memes like a headless Santa delivering a bomb. U.S. District Judge John Robert Blakey issued his verdict following a rare bench trial that began last month, convicting Ashraf al Safoo on 11 counts, including providing material support to a terrorist organization, conspiracy to transmit threats in interstate commerce, and computer fraud. Al Safoo faces up to 130 years behind bars when he's sentenced on Oct. 9. In his brief ruling from the bench, Blakey called the evidence at trial 'overwhelming.' The judge did, however, acquit al Safoo on a lone count involving $400 he'd wired to an Islamic State member in 2018, ruling that the evidence was insufficient that al Safoo knew of the recipient's status in the organization, also known as ISIS. Dressed in orange jail clothes, al Safoo, 41, kept his hands clasped behind him and did not react as the judge announced his ruling. Blakey said he will issue a more lengthy written opinion explaining his verdicts at a later date. After the hearing, U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros released a statement saying the case was 'a testament to the vigilance and dedication of our prosecutors and law enforcement partners who stand watch to disrupt and prevent dangerous threats before they materialize.' 'We will vigorously pursue and bring to justice those who provide material support — in whatever form — to terrorist organizations,' Boutros said. Al Safoo's attorney could not immediately be reached. Blakey's verdict turns the page in a long-running case beset by numerous delays as al Safoo changed legal teams and challenged some of the key evidence against him, including the testimony of convicted ISIS member Yasir al Anzi, who was captured in 2019 by U.S. forces in Iraq and is serving a sentence there of 20 years to life. At the time al Safoo was arrested in October 2018 at his home in the Budlong Woods neighborhood, the Islamic State was still considered one of the world's greatest terrorist threats, even though its caliphate had crumbled and the group had lost nearly all the territory it had seized in Iraq and Syria. Thousands of ISIS fighters were killed in the process and thousands more remain in prison. Despite its decline, however, U.S. officials have said the group still has an active core of battle-hardened militants, many operating in sleeper cells, and other terrorists groups remain loyal to the Islamic State's causes and are capable of striking on its behalf. In the charges, prosecutors alleged that although al Safoo was not a sworn ISIS member, he was a leader of a group called Khattab Media Foundation, an internet-based propaganda organization that swore an oath of allegiance to the Islamic State. 'Brothers, roll up your sleeves!' al Safoo allegedly posted in one Khattab-related forum in May 2018. 'Cut video publications into small clips, take still shots, and post the hard work of your brothers in the apostate's pages and sites. Participate in the war, and spread fear.' Authorities said the foundation ran like a well-oiled public relations firm, with writers, editors, tech advisers and audiovisual producers all pushing a central message of fear, violence and death. To accomplish his goals, al Safoo and his co-conspirators hacked legitimate social media accounts to make it seem like the messages were coming from actual users and to make it harder for platforms such as Twitter, now known as X, to take them down. When mistakes were made, employees were reprimanded, according to a criminal complaint unsealed against al Safoo in 2018. At one point, an editor sent out an officewide note about an embarrassing gaffe on a design featuring President Donald Trump that a member had mistranslated from Arabic using a Google app, the complaint stated. 'Instead of writing 'beheading' Trump, he wrote 'kissing and hugging' Trump,' the federal charges quoted the memo as saying. 'The Americans started laughing at the Islamic State. The image has circulated and it became a joke.' The charges alleged the Khattab group regularly promoted ISIS-inspired attacks, including the December 2017 shooting at a church in Egypt that killed nine people. But it also highlighted violence in the U.S. that was not connected to the terrorist group. The day after a gunman opened fire on concertgoers in Las Vegas in October 2017, killing 59, the media group called it a 'blessed operation … executed by one of the soldiers of the Caliphate,' according to the complaint. According to evidence at trial, after al Safoo's arrest, Khattab was responsible for an internet post calling for the beheading of then-Chicago FBI Special Agent in Charge Jeffrey Sallett. Al Safoo was not accused of playing a role in that post. In his closing argument to Blakey earlier this month, Assistant U.S. Attorney Thomas Peabody challenged the assertion of al Safoo's attorneys that what he was posting was protected First Amendment speech, saying al Safoo was 'not just repeating Islamic State propaganda' but 'dressing it up, lots of guns and fire and destruction, ready for distribution.' 'Media was the key. It was how the Islamic State grew and gained followers,' Peabody said. 'It's how they recruited fighters, it's how they inspired lone wolf attacks. And it was how they got their message out.' Al Safoo's attorney, James Vanzant, said in his closing remarks that much of the content his client put out was just 'repackaged' material from news reports already online. Other things were just plain silly, he said, pointing to the infographic posted by al Safoo's group depicting a headless Santa Claus delivering a package that contained a bomb and the words 'Our gifts are ready.' 'A lot of this stuff is juvenile…I've seen worse than this on Xbox chats,' Vanzant said. 'I don't know… Can we threaten Santa Claus? I guess we have a war on Christmas. But this is not a real threat…It's tasteless. I don't like looking at it but that doesn't matter. They have a right to say it.' A key portion of the prosecution's evidence focused on the videotaped testimony of al Anzi, a leader in the Islamic State's propaganda operation convicted in Iraqi courts. Al-Anzi sat for a sworn deposition several years ago in a courthouse in Bagdad, where he testified about his communications with Safoo. Dressed in a yellow jail outfit and speaking through an interpreter, al Anzi testified that Safoo, whom he knew as Abu Al-Iraqi, was affiliated with Khattab Media Foundation and that he had online communications with him about conducting a terrorist operation in Illinois, thought he could not remember specifics on the exact target. Al Safoo also sent the $400 to him, al Anzi testified, but he was clear that he wanted it to go to help refugee families who were starving in Syria at the time. Al Anzi said the money was indeed spent on medicine for one family and for food for another. A former web developer and internet technology specialist, al Safoo holds a masters degree in computer sciences and had been living in the U.S for about 10 years before his arrest. He's since been held in custody at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Chicago.