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A Last Warning: ISIL Leader Found Hanged In Al-Mayadeen

People in the city of al-Mayadeen in eastern Syria have come across the body of Abu Zaid Tunissi, a notorious ISIL ringleader, with a letter warning the terrorists to leave Deir Ezzor province. Fars News English reports: According to the sources, al-Tunissi was in charge of finding and punishing those who violate ISIL’s Wahhabi-Takfiri rules. Tunissi’s unknown executors hung his body in a street in al-Mayadeen city, Eastern Syria. Sources said that a note was left with Tunissi which threatened the ISIL to retreat from Deir Ezzur.

Arrested Mohamed Abrini Confesses To Being Third Man At Airport Bombing

Arrested Mohamed Abrini Confesses To Being Third Man At Airport Bombing

Ever since explosions ripped through the Brussels airport on the morning of March 22, which together with a separate bomb attack at the Maelbeek metro station killed 32 and wounded dozens, in a terrorist attack which took the lives of two of the perpetrators Brahim El Bakraoui, 30, and his brother Khalid, 27, shown in the left and center on the airport photo below...

 

... local authorities had been on the hunt for the third bomber, the one also known as "the man in the hat."

 

As of moments ago, he has been officially found.

U.S. Government Reveals 3,000 Ton Delivery Of Weapons And Ammo To Al-Qaeda-Linked Syrian Rebels

U.S. Government Reveals 3,000 Ton Delivery Of Weapons And Ammo To Al-Qaeda-Linked Syrian Rebels

By Moon of Alabama

U.S. Delivers 3,000 Tons Of Weapons And Ammo To Al-Qaeda & Co in Syria

The United States via its Central Intelligence Agency is still delivering thousands of tons of additional weapons to al-Qaeda and others in Syria.

The British military information service Janes found the transport solicitation for the shipment on the U.S. government website FedBizOps.gov. Janes writes:

French Riot Police In Tense Standoff Against Massive Labor Reform Protest: Live Webcast

Last week, when we reported on the latest clashes between French police and protesters in the ongoing labor reform saga, we said that "police used tear gas to disperse thousands of angry activists across the nation, who are protesting new labor reforms." According to the proposed reform states, employers would pay only 10% of overtime bonus, instead of the current 25%, making local workers understandably angry.

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