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US, Turkiye target financial network linked to Daesh

The US Treasury Department said it was taking joint action with Turkiye against a network it said played a key role in money transfer and distribution for Daesh. (File/AFP)
The US Treasury Department said it was taking joint action with Turkiye against a network it said played a key role in money transfer and distribution for Daesh. (File/AFP)
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06 Jan 2023 02:01:26 GMT9
06 Jan 2023 02:01:26 GMT9
  • Turkiye has frozen the assets of members to the network, who were also added to the US sanctions list

REUTERS

WASHINGTON: The US Treasury Department said on Thursday it was taking joint action with Turkiye against a network it said played a key role in money management, transfer and distribution for Daesh operating in Iraq and Syria.

Turkiye’s foreign affairs ministry said on Twitter the assets of seven individuals or legal persons involved in financing for the group were frozen.

The US Treasury Department said four individuals and two entities in Turkiye were designated under US sanctions.

They included an Iraqi national living illegally in Turkiye, Brukan Al-Khatuni, his two sons and an associate, and two businesses they used to transfer money on behalf of Daesh, between Turkiye, Iraq and Syria, the Treasury Department said in a statement.

The sanctions freeze any US assets they hold and generally bar Americans from dealing with them.

Daesh killed and executed thousands of people in the name of its extreme interpretation of Islam before it was territorially defeated in Iraq in 2017 and Syria in 2019.

The group last month named a new leader, Abu Al-Hussein Al-Husseini Al-Quraishi, after its previous head blew himself up in October while being besieged by former anti-government rebels in southern Syria.

The United States in November blacklisted four individuals and eight companies in South Africa aiding the group and in May imposed sanctions on a network of five Daesh financial facilitators working across Indonesia, Syria and Turkiye.

The head of the network targeted on Thursday, Brukan Al-Khatuni, helped with foreign financing for the group in Iraq before moving to Turkiye in 2016, where he helped transfer funds from donors and handled millions of dollars for the group, according to the Treasury Department. 

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