Salmi al-Mahasnah: Ansar Beit al-Maqdis militant responsible for arms and logistical support
The Ramadan 2020 TV series “El-Ekhteyar” (The Choice)
revealed the reality of the terrorists who thought they were prepared to
confront the Egyptian armed forces after one year of the Brotherhood
controlling the reins of affairs in the country.
“El-Ekhteyar” stars Amir Karara, Ahmed al-Awadi, Dina Fouad,
Sarah Adel, Mohamed Imam, Mohamed Ragab, Karim Mahmoud Abdel Aziz, Majed Al
Masry, Mohamed Ezz, Maha Nassar and many more, and it was written by Bahir
Dowidar, directed by Peter Mimi, and produced by Synergy. The series was
considered one of highest rated dramas in Ramadan this year, largely due to its
revelations about the reality of the Brotherhood and its relationship to the
prevalence of terrorism and extremism in Egypt.
The series deals with the life story of Ahmed Saber
al-Mansi, commander of the 103rd Battalion, who was martyred during an ambush
at Berth Square in the Egyptian city of Rafah in 2017 while countering a
terrorist attack in Sinai.
A penitential figure to have appeared in the series and who
made a clear imprint in the terrorist events carried out by the Ansar Beit al-Maqdis
terrorist group following the Brotherhood’s period of rule was Salmi al-Mahasnah,
portrayed by actor Yasser Ezzat.
Salmi Salama Salim Sulayman, known as Salmi al-Mahasnah,
took over the leadership of Ansar Beit al-Maqdis after the killing of the
organization's founder, Tawfiq Freij Ziyada, to whom he was close. Salmi comes
from Ismailia Governorate and holds an industrial technical diploma, and his
family resides in Sharqeya.
Investigations by the Supreme State Security Prosecution,
which monitored the terrorist group in 2015, revealed that Salmi had assumed
the leadership of the group and had contacted al-Qaeda to pledge allegiance to leader
Ayman al-Zawahiri. He had also contacted the Palestinian militant group Al-Nasser
Salah al-Deen Brigades in the Gaza Strip to provide the group with financial, military
and logistical support to carry out terrorist operations in Egypt, taking
advantage of the security situation in the aftermath of the January 25, 2011
revolution.
In 2016, Egypt’s security forces released a list of names in
the group , including Abu Asra (Salmi al-Mahasnah), Sabri Khalil Abdel-Ghani
Al-Nakhlawi, Abu Jaafar (Fayez Eid Abu Zeina), Walid Mohammed Abdel-Rahman
Al-Sayyid Awad (Walid al-Saeedi), Ahmed Fouad Ahmed Abdel-Ghani (Al-Harki
Azzam), Mahmoud Ibrahim, and many others.
Salmi also assumed the leadership of the Sinai Province
organization after Tawfiq Freij was killed and restructured the organization,
pledging allegiance to then-ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who was killed in
October 2019. Salmi commissioned his cadres to recruit new elements and prepare
them through educational courses to adopt the organization's ideology based on
making takfir against the ruler and security forces and obligating their targeting
in terrorist operations, as well as targeting members of the Christian
community and their houses of worship. The group also sought to target vital
state facilities, especially those affiliated with the security services, and
the militants also used social media to communicate, incite, and spread false
information.
Salmi also helped establish a route to travel to Libya to
train elements, in addition to a camp in the Abu Hadi Palace in the Libyan city
of Sirte to train the organization’s new elements on the use of all kinds of
weapons, as well as guerrilla and urban warfare. They were also trained in
preparing explosives and how to avoid monitoring by security forces as they
prepare to infiltrate the country to commit terrorist operations, while the
supply line secured weapons through Libya. The organization was also
restructured and divided it into two groups, the first led by Ashmawi in the
Valley region and the second in Sinai headed by Shadi al-Munai’i.
In June 2016, investigations by the Supreme State Security
Prosecution revealed that there is a line to supply the organization with weapons
through Libya, supervised by Salmi, and that the organization witnessed several
changes, including Hesham Ashmawi leaving the group to join the Derna
Mujahideen Shura Council in Libya, while Khalil al-Munai’i was promoted as the
organization’s military leader.




