The Malta Independent on Sunday

Islamic State activity In Libya ‘gains momentum’ – UN experts

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A panel of United Nations experts reported this week that the activities of Islamic State in Libya, particular­ly in the south of the country are increasing due to growing instabilit­y in the already war-torn state.

In a report made public on Friday, panel of experts said in a report to the UN Security Council that, “IS activity in southern Libya gained momentum as a result of preoccupat­ion with fighting around the capital of Tripoli.”

Moreover, ISIS in Libya is believed to be well funded, with the panel finding that “the extremist group is assessed to have substantia­l financial resources seized when it controlled the city of Sirte”.

Intelligen­ce collected at the IS camps in Libya have confirmed that the fighters had direct communicat­ion with the core Islamic State group in Syria and provided informatio­n on how they move through tunnels in the country.

The foreign fighter flow across the porous borders of the countries surroundin­g Libya, including Chad and Tunisia, continues to be a concern.

In Europe, the experts assessed that online propaganda encouragin­g lowtech, IS-inspired attacks is still available but member states report a reduced incidence of successful attacks. Nonetheles­s, European countries “assess that the risk remains high”.

Over all, leaders of the Islamic State extremist group are aiming to consolidat­e and create conditions for an “eventual resurgence in its Iraqi and Syrian heartlands,” according to the panel.

The panel of experts said in a report to the Security Council this week that the process is more advanced in Iraq, where IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi and most of the militant group’s leadership are now based following the fall of the so-called “caliphate“that he declared in the two neighbouri­ng countries.

In Syria, where the last IS stronghold was toppled in March, the IS covert network is spreading and sleeper cells are being establishe­d at the provincial level, mirroring what has been happening in Iraq since 2017, the report said.

As for al-Qaida, the panel said the extremist group “remains resilient” though its immediate global threat is not clear, with its leader, Ayman alZawahiri, “reported to be in poor health and doubts as to how the group will manage the succession.”

The report said “the most striking internatio­nal developmen­ts” during the first six months of 2019 include “the growing ambition and reach of terrorist groups in the Sahel and West Africa,” where fighters from IS and al-Qaida are collaborat­ing to undermine fragile countries. “The number of regional states threatened with contagion from insurgenci­es in the Sahel and Nigeria has increased,” said the experts, who monitor UN sanctions against both extremist groups.

In a video message in late April, alBaghdadi said IS “still aspires to have global relevance and expects to achieve this by continuing to carry out internatio­nal attacks,” the panel said.

The experts said IS, which is also known as ISIL, is currently dependent on attacks that it inspires like the Easter Sunday church bombings in Sri Lanka. Al-Baghdadi mentioned the bombings but the panel said IS leaders “clearly knew nothing” in advance.

Whether or not the Sri Lankan attacks were motivated by a previous attack on Muslims at mosques in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, in March, “the narrative of interfaith conflict is concerning,” the panel added.

Looking ahead, the experts said the Islamic State group “will reinvest in the capacity to direct and facilitate complex internatio­nal attacks when it has the secure space and time to do so.” The panel added, “The current abatement of such attacks, therefore, may not last long, possibly not even until the end of 2019.”

The panel said up to 30,000 foreign fighters and others who travelled to the so-called “caliphate” that IS establishe­d in parts of Iraq and Syria may still be alive, “and their future prospects will be of internatio­nal concern for the foreseeabl­e future.”

Outside Syria and Iraq, the experts said, IS and al-Qaida are contending “for dominance and internatio­nal relevance.” They said that in Afghanista­n, concerns remain about short-term and long-term threats posed by groups affiliated with both IS and al-Qaida as well as “foreign terrorist fighters who have establishe­d themselves on Afghan territory.”

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