Oman Daily Observer

Europol warns of more IS attacks

LOOMING THREAT: Experts expect that IS will start planning and dispatchin­g attacks from Libya

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THE HAGUE: Terror networks such as the IS group are evolving their tactics to attack soft targets in Europe, which could see the use of deadly car bombs, Europol warned on Friday.

Militant attacks on EU member states have not yet involved “the use of home-made, commercial or military explosives in vehicle-borne improvised explosive devices” as in Syria or Iraq, Europe’s police agency said in a report issued in The Hague.

But “given the fact that the (techniques) used in Middle Eastern countries tend to be copied by terrorists operating in Europe... it is conceivabl­e that militant groups will use this means at some stage,” it said.

The group responsibl­e for attacks in Paris a year ago and in Brussels in March wanted to deploy such devices until police actions forced them to change their plans, the report said.

Militants massacred 130 people in November 2015 in attacks on the Bataclan concert hall, a handful of pubs and restaurant­s in eastern Paris, and France’s national stadium.

In Belgium, suicide bombers struck Brussels airport and a metro station near the European Union headquarte­rs on March 22, killing 32 people.

The 14-page report, an update on methods and tactics used by IS, also said counter-terror experts were concerned that strife-torn Libya could develop into a “second springboar­d for IS, after Syria, for attacks in the EU and North Africa”.

Since the armed revolt five years ago that overthrew ruler Muammar Gaddafi, the North African country has been plagued by violence and political instabilit­y.

“Experts expect that IS will start planning and dispatchin­g attacks from Libya if the current phase, in which they are primarily focused on taking territory and dispatchin­g of local enemies, comes to an end.”

Europe’s security services arrested 667 suspects for suspected militant activities in 2015, the report added.

A Belgian mayor said he had been told that his country was under threat again, following the March 22 suicide bombings at Brussels airport and on the metro.

“It’s new for Belgium, it’s new for Europe... that there is a call from the highest level of IS on using car bombs in Europe,” Vilvoorde Mayor Hans Bonte, who has contacts with Belgian intelligen­ce and police, said.

“Belgium is clearly mentioned as one of the target countries,” added Bonte, whose town just north of Brussels has seen a number of young people leave to fight militancy in Syria.

A Belgian official said on condition of anonymity that it is likely that the Belgian government will issue new detailed instructio­ns over the next few days to police agencies about how to deal with the risk of car bombs.

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