Militant Islamist Website Calls For Attacks On France And Hollande
A militant Islamist website has created a series of posters
calling for attacks on France and for the assassination of President Francois
Hollande in reprisal for the country's policies in Mali and the Central African
Republic, the SITE monitoring service said late on Monday.
In addition to assisting Mali in its war against Islamists,
France sent troops four months ago to the majority Christian Central African
Republic, where predominantly Muslim "Seleka" rebels seized power a
year ago. The Seleka have since been pushed back by Christian
"anti-balaka" - "anti-machete" in the local language -
militia.
The al Minbar Jihadi Media Network, a well-known Islamist
website, created six posters as part of a campaign it dubbed, "We will not
be silent, O France," SITE said. The forum's "Media soldiers for the support of
Islam" designed the posters, which can be downloaded and printed by
visitors to the site.
France's troops in the Central African Republic, around
2,000 soldiers, are supporting a 6,000-strong African Union peacekeeping
mission. "To our lone-wolves in France, assassinate the
president of disbelief and criminality, terrify his cursed government, and bomb
them and scare them as a support to the vulnerable in the Central African
Republic," one of the posters said.
Hollande has said his troops would work to stop the Central
African Republic splitting in two and to disarm rival fighters. A source in the French president's office said that while
the government was very alert to the threat of attacks, they were not a new
phenomenon. "This is not the first time there have been
threats," the source said. "There were others during the Mali
intervention and even before, so we took precautionary measures." "Just because they (threats) are being publicized does
not mean that they are new... Sometimes they are more dangerous when they are
not publicized."
Al Minbar Jihadi Media Network publishes news for various al
Qaeda affiliates and other jihadists and has had an online magazine since July
last year.
A French-led offensive in January 2013 drove out Islamist
militants who had seized control of northern Mali. Small groups of fighters
loyal to Islamist groups including the Movement for Unity and Jihad in West
Africa and al Qaeda in the Maghreb still operate in the desert region, carrying
out periodic attacks.
Kidnappings and killing of French nationals has since then
taken place as a form of reprisal.
Two French journalists were abducted and killed in Northern
Mali in November, with Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb claiming responsibility.
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