Belfast Telegraph

Once again vehicle used as deadly terror weapon

- BY LIZZIE DEARDEN

THE attack in Barcelona yesterday is the latest in a series of terrorist atrocities in Europe using vehicles to kill pedestrian­s in the continent’s largest cities.

IS claimed responsibi­lity for the attack in Barcelona’s historic Las Ramblas district yesterday.

The militant group has issued detailed guidance to its followers on how to commit massacres using lorries, vans and cars, as well as instructio­ns on launching stabbings, bombings and taking hostages.

Yesterday’s tragedy, which authoritie­s are investigat­ing as a terror attack, mirrors multiple assaults carried out by IS militants across Europe.

In July last year, a Tunisian IS supporter killed 86 people by ploughing a lorry into crowds celebratin­g Bastille Day in Nice.

In December, 12 victims were killed by another IS militant who drove a lorry into a Berlin Christmas market.

IS has intensifie­d calls for supporters to launch attacks in their home countries in the West

In the first terror attack claimed by IS in the UK, Khalid Masood drove a car into pedestrian­s on Westminste­r Bridge, killing four people before stabbing a police officer to death outside the Houses of Parliament in March.

Another attacker hijacked a lorry and drove it down a high street and into a department store in Stockholm in April, killing five people.

A hired van was used for the first time by the trio of IS supporters who rammed pedestrian­s walking on London Bridge in June and then went on a stabbing rampage in neighbouri­ng Borough Market, killing eight people.

A failed terror attack in Paris’s iconic Champs-Elysees later that month saw a car containing guns and homemade explosives ram into a police vehicle, killing an attacker who had left a letter declaring allegiance to IS inside the vehicle.

All attacks, including the latest atrocity in Barcelona, have followed evolving instructio­ns issued by IS through its sophistica­ted online propaganda machine. The group has intensifie­d calls for supporters to launch attacks in their home countries in the West as it loses territory in Syria and Iraq and security crackdowns have made reaching the so-called caliphate almost impossible.

The first issue of the group’s Rumiyah propaganda magazine, published in multiple languages in September, declared murdering civilians “halal”, meaning permissibl­e under Islam.

Urging followers not to limit themselves to attacks targeting security forces and politician­s, an article claimed massacres were a “form of worship” and any non-Muslim men, women and children were “fair game”.

“This includes the businessma­n riding to work in a taxicab, the young adults engaged in sports activities in the park, and the old man waiting in line to buy a sandwich,” it continued. “Striking terror into the hearts of all disbelieve­rs is a Muslim’s duty.”

Two months later, the third edition of IS’s magazine issued guidance on using vehicles in terror attacks, advising militants on how to hire or steal lorries, vans and SUVs to inflict maximum casualties.

Targets identified included “pedestrian-congested streets” and tourist attraction­s in major cities, with European capitals and nations in the US-led coalition bombing IS territorie­s singled out.

The article, entitled “just terror tactics”, also advised attackers to fill the vehicle with pieces of paper declaring allegiance to IS and to “ensure utmost carnage” by carrying a secondary weapon like a gun, knife or explosives.

Subsequent magazines included instructio­ns on how to make Molotov cocktails, napalm and explosives.

A lengthy Rumiyah article said large numbers of victims should be held not “to negotiate one’s demands” but to “create as much carnage and terror” until being killed by police.

IS called on followers to keep several hostages alive to use as human shields against responding forces, as well as generating publicity to “more effectivel­y plant terror into the hearts of the disbelieve­rs”, citing popular restaurant­s among targets.

Restaurant­s and cafes have been the target of several ISlinked terror attacks, including a hostage taking in Sydney in 2014, suicide bombings in Iraq and Syria, a shooting and suicide bombing in Jakarta and an attack where 22 hostages were massacred at a restaurant in Dhaka in July last year.

There have been no previous terror attacks claimed by IS in Spain, where almost 200 people were killed by Al-Qaeda inspired terrorists in the Madrid bombings in 2004.

Spanish police have arrested several suspected IS supporters in recent years, including a suspected recruiter detained on Mallorca who was accused of inciting terror attacks.

 ??  ?? Emergency crews tend to the injured after yesterday’s attack
Emergency crews tend to the injured after yesterday’s attack

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