Global Coalition Fears Islamic State Expansion in Africa
Voice of America
WASHINGTON - Western powers are promising recent successes by the Islamic State across Africa will not go unanswered, backing plans for a task force to focus on the terror group’s spread from Iraq and Syria to the African continent. #ISIS-#Africa: "In my recent missions to #Niger & #Mali, I witnessed the cry for help from those communities" per #Italy FM Di Maio (via translator)"We know that many villages have fallen in the hands of terrorists..." Di Maio says, noting need for "holistic approach" .@HumAngle_ @Reuters have reported #ISIS-West #Africa leader Abu Musab al-Barnawi confirmed #BokoHaram's Shekau death last month in a recent audio recordinghttps://t.co/o69685Q6TL “We agreed at the working level that West #Africa & the #Sahel would be a preferred, initial area of focus for the Coalition outside of the #ISIS core space –& w/good reason” per @SecPompeo "ISIS is outpacing the ability of regional gvts and int'l partners to address the threat” US designates a top #ISIS in the Greater Sahara (ISIS-GS) official as a Specially Designated Global TerroristPer @StateDept, Ousmane Illiassou Djibo –aka Petit Chapori – is a close collaborator/key lieutenant of ISIS-GS leader, Adnan Abu Walid al-Sahrawi pic.twitter.com/ii9XEWXNB2
The announcement Monday following a meeting in Rome by the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS comes a day before the seventh anniversary of the terror group’s proclamation of its self-declared caliphate in Iraq and Syria, and two years since the caliphate’s territorial defeat in Syria. But despite constant pressure from the U.S. military and other coalition members, Western counterterrorism officials warn that IS, or Daesh as the group is also known, has found ways not just to survive but to spread, increasingly focusing the group’s propaganda on the exploits of its African affiliates. “We are fearing the expansion and spread of Daesh in Africa," Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Maio told reporters Monday, citing what he described as a “cry for help” from communities in countries such as Niger and Mali.