4 ISIS Suspects Arrested in Nicaragua

Nicaraguan authorities arrested on Tuesday four suspected
ISIS members after entering the country illegally from Costa Rica, Nicaraguan
police said.
The identities of three of the men matched those of suspects
featured in an alert attributed to US Homeland Security Investigations (HSI)
warning that three possible terrorists had recently arrived in Central America.
In a statement, Nicaraguan police said two of the men were
Egyptian nationals and the other two were Iraqi. The four were due to be
deported back to Costa Rica, it added.
The Egyptians were named as Mohamed Ibrahim, 33, and Mahmoud
Samy Eissa, 26, while the Iraqis were Ahmed Ghanim Mohamed Al Jubury, 41 and
Mustafa Ali Mohamed Yaoob, 29.
The first three men were named in the HSI alert published by
Mexican media on Monday, which identified them as possible members of ISIS
headed for the United States.
Questioned on the HSI alert on Tuesday, Mexican President
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador said his government was aware of the search for the
suspects and was dealing with the matter.
US Homeland Security officials could not immediately be
reached for comment by Reuters.
The three men who featured in the HSI alert were registered
in Costa Rica on June 9, according to the Nicaraguan statement. That date
matched the information as the HSI statement.
The fourth suspect, Mohamed Yaoob, was registered in Costa
Rica on June 13, the statement said.
The men entered Nicaragua through an unauthorized crossing
point known as La Guasimada in the Cardenas municipality on the southwestern
border with Costa Rica, Nicaraguan police said.
After arresting the men at around 10 am, the army handed
them over to national police for investigation, whereupon they were taken to
migration authorities for deportation via the Penas Blancas border crossing,
the statement said.
The four men were delivered to Costa Rican migration
authorities at around 7 pm, Nicaragua’s government said.