“Osama Bin Laden had been tracked down to a hideout in Pakistan – repeatedly shot and his body taken away – reportedly dropped in the sea.” For many, the reaction was triumphant. The man was gone, would Al Qaeda itself collapse?
‘Since the death of Osama bin Laden five years ago, Al Qaida has
weakened in terms of its lethality and potency of operations and its
financial muscle has largely decreased’ Said Mwendia Mbinjwe, Security
analyst.
But it’s certainly not broken Egyptian Ayman al-Zawahiri took over
the leadership and in the past five years, Africa has been a frequent
target.
To the East, its affiliate Al Shabab has struck repeatedly in Somalia
– and Kenya. To the West, Al Qaeda has launched deadly attacks in
Burkina Faso, Cote D’Ivoire and Mali. But it’s not the only jihadist
group determined to claim Africa. From a foothold in Libya, ISIL has hit
targets in neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt. Nigeria’s Boko Haram has
pledged allegiance to ISIL – even some Somali jihadists have dumped Al
Qaeda in favour of ISIL.
‘They are all affiliating to the new kid on the block who has the
money to finance them (cover cut) African forces fighting the current
brand of terror must study ISIS, how the operate and anticipate the kind
of attacks and operations coming to their regions’ Said Mwendia
Mbinjwe, Security analyst.
Al Qaeda remains a deadly force. But five years on, Bin Laden’s
movement is facing its biggest challenge, possibly bigger even than the
death of the man himself.
Source: cctv-africa.com
No comments:
Post a Comment
Add a Comment...