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Publicado: 16 May 2008 03:06
por Tor
Pongo esto aqui porque creo que es serio como para ponerlo en la cafeteria en el tema de futbol.

ASÍ LO HA CONFIRMADO UN FUNCIONARIO DE LA POLICIA SUIZA EN UN PERIÓDICO

Al-Qaeda amenaza con atentar en la Eurocopa
La red terrorista de Al Qaida está haciendo numerosos llamamientos a sus seguidores para que cometan atentados en Suiza y Austria durante la celebración de la Eurocopa de Fútbol, en junio, amenazas que son tomadas en serio por las autoridades, asegura un diario suizo.

Según informa "La liberté de Fribourg", los llamamientos a cometer atentados han florecido en las últimas semanas en los sitios islamistas de Internet más populares, y no dejan lugar a dudas. "Transformemos a los dos países más seguros e Europa en un infierno, como el infierno iraquí o el de Afganistán", o "Ha llegado la hora para los combatientes de la fe. Deben dejar oír su voz", son algunas de las frases difundidas en esas páginas.

Según un miembro de los servicios de seguridad de la Confederación Helvética, citado por el diario pero sin identificarle, se toman esas amenazas "en serio". "Estamos alerta y seguimos de cerca esos foros yihadistas porque es a través de ellos cómo los agentes de Bin Laden despiertan a las células durmientes", dice. En el último informe de la Oficina federal de la Policía, ya se señalaba que "Suiza está situada en la zona expuesta al riesgo yihadista, como es Europa Occidental, pero no es un objetivo de primera clase para el terrorismo islamista". Según se ha informado, para la seguridad de la Eurocopa unos 15.000 militares suizos se sumarán a las fuerzas de seguridad.


Austria no tiene constancia de posibles ataques
Las autoridades austríacas aseguraron que no disponen de información alguna sobre supuestas amenazas de la red terrorista islámica Al Qaeda contra la próxima Eurocopa de fútbol, tal y como informó hoy un diario en la vecina Suiza, que organiza junto a Austria el torneo. Rudolf Gollia, portavoz del ministerio del Interior austríaco, aseguró en declaraciones a Efe en Viena que la policía de la república alpina "no dispone de ninguna información sobre supuestas amenazas".

El funcionario agregó que las autoridades austríacas están "en contacto permanente" con sus colegas en la vecina Suiza. Según Gollia, las autoridades suizas han indicado a las austríacas que la noticia sobre supuestas amenazas de Al Qeada se deben a una "mala interpretación" de unas declaraciones hechas por un alto funcionario policial a un diario local. "Las autoridades suizas nos han dicho que se distancian de las declaraciones publicadas" en el periódico "La Liberté de Fribourg", dijo el portavoz.

Según informa hoy el rotativo suizo, los llamamientos a cometer atentados han florecido en las últimas semanas en los sitios islamistas de internet más populares, y no dejan lugar a dudas. "Transformemos a los dos países más seguros de Europa en un infierno, como el infierno iraquí o el de Afganistán", o "Ha llegado la hora para los combatientes de la fe. Deben dejar oír su voz", son algunas de las frases difundidas en esas páginas.

Además, un miembro de los servicios de seguridad suizos, citado por el diario pero sin identificarle, dijo que "nos tomamos todas esas amenazas en serio". "Estamos alerta y seguimos de cerca esos foros yihadistas porque es a través de ellos cómo los agentes de (Osama) Bin Laden despiertan a las células durmientes", dijo la fuente.
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Publicado: 14 Oct 2008 23:58
por Tor
Hace tiempo que no aporto nada al foro, y hoy he vivido una cosa, tal vez de poca importancia, pero que no deja de ser informacion y al fin y al cabo lo que hacemos aqui es recopilarla.

Hoy paseaba por una capital europea, cuando por casualidad pase por la embajada de Estados Unidos. Para mi sorpresa me encontre con cierta protesta musulmana en su puerta. Hay varias cosas que quiero destacar.

La primera es que me resulto un tanto violenta no en el sentido de altercados, si no en el sentido de los manifestantes. Me explico, uno de ellos tenia un microfono con el que iba hablando y el resto en ciertos momentos daban gritos al unisono, muchos de ellos iban con las caras cubiertas y por momentos pense que la situacion se iba a tensar ademas de que aquellos que estaban con la cara descubierta era primos hermanos del Bin Laden puesto que tenia sus mismas pintas.

La segunda cosa, me resulto muy curioso ver como hasta en las manifestacion las mujeres estaban por un lado y los hombres por otro. Por supuesto todas ellas de riguroso negro y tapadas completamente excepto una abertura a la altura de los ojos.

y tercero y para terminar, no se han olvidado de nosotros, El nombre de España salia en sus gritos junto con los de Estados Unido y Reino Unido.

Bueno pues esto era todo, tal vez una informacion intrascendente, con la que simplemente queria dejar caer el hecho de que seguimos en el punto de mira.
Un saludo

Publicado: 03 Nov 2008 01:27
por cartledge
Aquí teneis un trabajo sobre la raicalización yihadista relacionada con la inmigración. El enlace es www.athenaintellicence.org/spip.php?article149

Publicado: 26 Nov 2008 00:20
por cartledge
Un documento interesante: Trata sobre Hizb Ut Tahrir. El enlace es www.athenaintelligence.org/vol3.n4.carta1.pdf

Re: Yihadistas en Europa

Publicado: 05 Dic 2008 19:58
por sombra
El peligro de los terroristas paquistaníes en Europa:

http://www.worldpoliticsreview.com/Article.aspx?id=3007
World Citizen: Europe, Too, Faces Pakistan-Linked Terrorism

Frida Ghitis | 04 Dec 2008

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands -- Concerns over terrorism rise at moments like this, when a massacre garners intense media attention, as did the attacks in Mumbai. But terrorist plots and efforts to stop them have become a common event in many parts of the world. And in Europe, where investigations, disrupted plots, and arrests have become a regular occurrence, many of the cases show disturbing links to the events in India.

In the aftermath of the terror in Mumbai, tensions between India and Pakistan continue to grow, as Delhi points a finger at its neighbor and rival as the source of the plot that left more than 170 dead. The Pakistani government denies involvement, but there is scant doubt that Pakistan has become the primary location for hatching plots and training would-be terrorists to strike in many parts of the world. Plainly, the problem of Pakistan-based terrorism is not just a challenge for India.

The 2008 EU Terrorism Situation and Trend Report (.pdf) prepared by Europol, the European Police Office, warns that the "EU is increasingly influenced by Pakistani-based al-Qaida-affiliated groups and networks," ominously warning that "Islamist terrorism in the EU continues to aim at causing indiscriminate mass casualties."

The potential perpetrators of terrorist attacks against Europe are not just Pakistanis. Europol says European citizens have been traveling to Pakistan for training, too, with the travel records of some would-be terrorists arrested in Europe showing numerous visits.

It is widely accepted that al-Qaida relocated its base of operations across the border from Afghanistan after the United States launched the war that removed the al-Qaida-friendly Taliban regime following the 9/11 attacks. Since then, concerns have grown about the border regions becoming a haven for attacks against U.S., European and Afghan forces. What goes on in the lawless frontiers of Pakistan, however, has an impact beyond Afghanistan. It reaches all the way to places such as Amsterdam and Barcelona, and could conceivably extend across the Atlantic, just as activities planned inside Afghanistan had an explosive impact in New York and Washington in September 2001.

Pakistan's tribal regions have always remained beyond the full control of the central government, and their autonomy has been exploited by the country's security forces, whose agenda does not always mirror that of the government.

Pakistani intelligence may be focused on the Kashmir dispute and the rivalry with India. But the ease of obtaining training with like-minded Islamists has made Pakistan an ideal location for various jihadist groups with differing priorities. While Kashmir may stand at the forefront for Pakistani fighters, attacks against Europe and the U.S. rank at the top of the strategic aims of others who receive training in the remote tribal areas.

Despite Europe's determined counterterrorism efforts and a long list of successes, the frequency with which plots are uncovered points to the very real possibility that, sooner or later, the terrorists will score another major victory. Already terrorists have inflicted massive casualties in London and Madrid. Extremist killers have struck in Amsterdam, and plots have targeted a number of major European cities, not to mention transatlantic passenger flights.

In 2008 alone, the list of arrests and plots -- those made public -- shows that militants have not given up their efforts:

* In January, authorities broke up a cell in Barcelona, arresting 10 men they believed were plotting an attack against the Barcelona subway. Most of the suspects were Pakistani and were known to have traveled to the tribal areas.

* In March, Dutch police arrested a 26-year-old Pakistani man in the city of Breda, claiming he was part of a terrorist cell plotting an attack against a Western European target.

* In May, police arrested 10 people in three countries -- France, the Netherlands, and Germany -- on suspicion of participation in terrorist activities.

* In June, Spanish police working in the anti-terrorism Operation Submarine arrested eight Algerian-born men in three cities. Authorities said the men were members of al-Qaida in the Maghreb, which had just claimed responsibility for bombings in Algeria that killed dozens of civilians, including U.N. officials.

* In September, German authorities at the Cologne-Bonn airport raided a KLM plane just before its scheduled takeoff for Amsterdam and arrested two men, a Somali and a Somali-born German citizen. Police said they had found a suicide note in which the men described their intention to die in a suicide attack.

This is only a partial list. The sheer number of anti-terrorist operations means authorities are doing their job. But it also means the terrorists, too, are pushing forward with their objectives.

Even without any major successes in recent months, terrorist plots concocted by jihadists in Europe are already reshaping the continent. In addition to security ramifications, the militants have an impact on social and political developments. Jihadists living in Europe stoke anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant sentiment and thus are changing the political landscape. If they manage to elude anti-terrorist efforts and bring a Mumbai-style massacre -- or worse -- to Europe, the impact will be even greater.

Clearly, the question of what to do about Pakistan's haven for terrorism is not one for India to resolve alone.

Frida Ghitis is an independent commentator on world affairs and a World Politics Review contributing editor. Her weekly column, World Citizen, appears every Thursday.
Hasta hace unos años, el fenómeno del integrista paquistaní era más típico de Gran Bretaña; ahora los tenemos en nuestras calles.

Otra cosa, imprescindible: el informe de EUROPOL sobre terrorismo en la UE 2008

http://www.europol.europa.eu/publicatio ... AT2008.pdf

Re: Yihadistas en Europa

Publicado: 17 Feb 2009 20:59
por LIVIO2000
Al Qaeda envía jóvenes a universidades europeas, para prepararlos como terroristas especialista en armas no convencionales.RIA NOVOSTI
Moscú, 17 de febrero, RIA Novosti. La red terrorista internacional Al Qaeda envía a jóvenes a los centros docentes europeos para prepararlos como terroristas nucleares, declaró hoy el emisario especial del presidente ruso para la cooperación internacional en la lucha contra el terrorismo y la delincuencia transnacional, Anatoli Safónov.

"Al Qaeda selecciona a jóvenes y los envía a las principales universidades europeas para que se formen como físicos, químicos o biólogos", informó Safónov a la prensa.

"Nuestros colegas europeos afirman haber descubierto pistas de Al Qaeda en varias universidades de Europa", expresó el emisario del presidente ruso.

.- Saludos

CÉLULAS DURMIENTES DE ALQAIDA EN EUROPA Y ESPAÑA

Publicado: 29 Abr 2009 17:17
por mangosta
¿ qué hacemos con todas las células durmientes que hay en españa y en europa antes de que despierten? Es una pregunta muy sencilla, sin ánimo de ser negativo ni alarmista.... ¿ de verdad la tercera guerra mundial empezará en españa? Enfin, preguntas tontas....digo yo.

Re: CÉLULAS DURMIENTES DE ALQAIDA EN EUROPA Y ESPAÑA

Publicado: 29 Abr 2009 17:29
por astadourian
identificarlas,seguirlas,localizarlas,recoger indicios de sus actividades delictivas y actuar en consecuencia,no veo mayor complicacion en lo que hay que hacer con ellos (otra cosa es la dificultad de ese proceso,pero vamos..)

CÉLULAS DURMIENTES DE ALQAIDA EN EUROPA Y ESPAÑA

Publicado: 29 Abr 2009 17:51
por mangosta
Exacto hay radica el gran problema en que ahora los musulmanes que hay en españa a la orden de algún imán iluminado se levanten y empiecen a cortar cabezas ah Y NO SOY RACISTA PARA NADA....DIOS ME LIBRE....Pero el problema radica en que no solo los fanaticos son peligrosos....o que desde fuera de españa se de esa orden en nombre o supuesto nombre de alá.... porque lo que dios quiere para nosotros, a veces no es lo que nosotros decimos que dios nos ha dicho....o revelado. sea cristiano o musulmán o el nombre que le hayamos puesto a ese dios extraterrestre... enfin hay queda el tema....

Re: Yihadistas en Europa

Publicado: 25 May 2009 18:56
por kilo009
Interesante artículo que viene a relatar la experiendia de unos belgas y franceses que fueron a Waziristan en busca de Al-Qaeda:
Reporting from Brussels -- Determined to die as martyrs, the French and Belgian militants bought hiking boots and thermal underwear and journeyed to the wilds of Waziristan.

After getting ripped off in Turkey and staggering through waist-deep snow in Iran, the little band arrived in Al Qaeda's lair in Pakistan last year, ready for a triumphant reception.

"We were expecting at least a welcome for 'our brothers from Europe' and a warm atmosphere of hospitality," Walid Othmani, a 25-year-old Frenchman from Lyon, recalled during an overnight interrogation in January.

Instead, the Europeans -- and at least one American -- learned that life in the shadow of the Predator is nasty, brutish and short.

Wary of spies, suspicious Al Qaeda chiefs grilled the half-dozen Belgians and French. They charged them $1,200 each for AK-47 rifles, ammunition and grenades. They made them fill out forms listing next of kin and their preference: guerrilla fighting, or suicide attacks?


Then the trainees dodged missile strikes for months. They endured disease, quarrels and boredom, huddling in cramped compounds that defied heroic images of camps full of fraternal warriors.

"What you see in videos on the Net, we realized that was a lie," Othmani told police. "[Our chief] told us the videos . . . served to impress the enemy and incite people to come fight, and he knew this was a scam and propaganda."

Disenchantment aside, the accounts of four of the returning militants arrested in Europe combine with intercepts to paint a detailed picture of Al Qaeda's secret compounds. They also reinforce intelligence that a campaign of U.S. Predator drone airstrikes has sown suspicion and disarray and stoked tension with tribes in northwestern Pakistan, anti-terrorism officials say.

At the same time, the case shows that wily militant leaders still wage war in South Asia and train a flow of foreign recruits. The few trainees from the West remain an urgent concern. Anti-terrorism forces have detected at least one American, a convert to Islam, who trained with Al Qaeda in Pakistan during the last year, Western officials say.

Militant paths from the U.S. and Europe may cross: Prosecutors in Brussels have made a request to interrogate a witness now in the United States who was in Pakistan with the European suspects, a Belgian anti-terrorism official said.

Police in Europe tracked the group's radicalization and travel with the help of real-time U.S. intercepts that corroborate the confessions, and they exploited the men's reliance on the Internet. Fear of an imminent attack spurred their arrests here in December after Hicham Beyayo, 25, a Belgian just back from Pakistan, sent a troubling e-mail to his girlfriend.

"I am leaving for an O [operation] and I don't think I will return," Beyayo wrote Dec. 6, according to investigative documents. "My request has been accepted. You will get a video from me to you from the [organization]."

Beyayo told police that he was boasting to impress his girlfriend. But investigators believe the group may have been groomed for missions at home.

"They were much more valuable for operations in Europe," said the Belgian anti-terrorism official, who, like others interviewed, requested anonymity because the investigation is continuing. "Al Qaeda does not need Belgians and French to fight in Afghanistan."

Islamic resistance doesn't come cheap

Beyayo is about 5-foot-5, chubby and bespectacled. Like the others, he is of North African descent. He grew up in the tough Anderlecht neighborhood of Brussels, and his brothers have done time for robbery and arms trafficking. But he does not have a criminal record. He interspersed college courses with fundamentalist Islam.

"He is the intellectual of the family," said his lawyer, Christophe Marchand. "He bears no ill will against Belgium. He went to Afghanistan to join an Islamic resistance movement."

Islamic resistance is expensive. The unemployed Beyayo scrounged together about $5,000 for the trip.

The Frenchman Othmani, a father of two, had to borrow about $1,000 from his mother, and he spent hundreds on hiking boots, a sleeping bag, thermal underwear and a "big Columbia-brand jacket for the cold."

The leader was Moez Garsalloui, 42, a Tunisian married to the Belgian widow of a militant who killed Ahmed Shah Massoud, an anti-Taliban warlord, in a suicide bombing two days before the Sept. 11 attacks.



http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld ... 3912.story