Arab News

Daesh extremists ‘taking fight’ to Africa, warns US

Tougher security helps Southeast Asia escape terror threat, official says

- Ellie Aben Manila

Daesh extremists fleeing Syria are showing little interest in “taking the fight” to Southeast Asia and are focusing their efforts on Africa, a senior US counterter­rorism official said.

“We know that the Daesh core, the remnants of Daesh in Syria, have been encouragin­g their fighters to leave and fight again, to take the fight to other regions,” Nathan Sales, coordinato­r for counterter­rorism at the US State Department, said.

“But the truth is that Southeast Asia is not one of the regions that militants seem to be heading to in droves.”

Sales, who was in Manila on Friday to meet national security and counterter­rorism officials,

TERRORISM

said there have been “few indication­s of interest” among extremists in traveling to the region following the fall of the caliphate.

When asked to elaborate on the movement of extremists from the Middle East to other areas, Sales identified West Africa and the Sahel as areas of concern, with countries such as Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger facing growing threats from militants.

“So far we haven’t seen a huge problem in the Philippine­s, but we have to make sure we keep it that way,” he said.

US and the Philippine officials are looking to strengthen border security to prevent extremist groups from exploiting the Philippine­s’ extended coastline to gain access to the country.

The increased number of suicide bombings in the southern Philippine­s remains a source of concern to the US, Sales said. “We’re concerned about the export from the Middle East of terrorist tactics, techniques and procedures,” he said. “Suicide bombing is not something that we have seen in Southeast Asia until recently.

“We are worried that Daesh sympathize­rs will emulate what they see in places like Syria and Afghanista­n,” he said. Counterter­rorism strategies are increasing­ly focused on law enforcemen­t, border security and restrictin­g finance to militant groups, Sales said. He said the

US is also concerned about the militant Daesh-Khorasan Province in Afghanista­n, which “threatens to destabiliz­e not just Afghanista­n but also neighborin­g countries.” In East Africa, Al-Shabab has long been one of the most serious threats, and “now we’re starting to see the growth of an Al-Qaeda affiliate in Somalia as well.”

A US Department of Defense report to Congress early this month said that lack of support from Daesh’s core leadership and inadequate financing meant the terror group’s East Asian unit is only capable of conducting “small-scale or suicide attacks on Jolo, Sulu and (other parts of) Mindanao island.” Most suicide attacks in Mindanao have been carried out by “foreign nationals who attempted and failed to travel to the conflict zone in Syria and Iraq, and they were likely radicalize­d before traveling to the Philippine­s.”

 ??  ?? A mummified cat was one of a hoard found in a tomb in the Saqqara
necropolis, south of Cairo.
A mummified cat was one of a hoard found in a tomb in the Saqqara necropolis, south of Cairo.

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