Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search
Issue 419 -- Jan. 06- 12, 2010

Front Page

News Headlines

Somaliland’s Diplomacy In High Gear At African Summit

President Of Puntland Student Union Killed

Local and Regional Affairs

NATO Special Forces Storm Hijacked Ship, Free Crew

Pirates Aboard Libyan Vessel Fire On Somaliland Forces

Direct Flights To Somaliland Launched

Somaliland Journalists Meet With African Leaders And UN Secretary-General In Ethiopia

Reported Hijacking Of Cambodian Ship False

Battle Islamist Militia – IGAD

Editorial

The International Media And International Community Are Making The Somali Problem Worse

Features & Commentary

Fractionalized, Armed and Lethal: Why Somalia Matters

International News

Opinion

Demystifying The Iidoor Scapegoat Phenomena

Yusuf Garaad’s Abuse of the BBC Somali Service

World Cup Feared Target Of Al-Qaida

LONDON, February 06, 2010 – Intelligence reports are revealing that scores of al-Qaida-linked terrorists have been tracked from Somalia down through Africa into Zimbabwe, where its ostracized President Robert Mugabe reportedly has allowed them to hide while they prepare to launch attacks on international fans who will be attending the most prestigious soccer tournament – the FIFA World Cup, according to a report from Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin.

Reports say the terrorists are members of al-Shabaab and the leader is the Yemen based Sheikh Moktar Ali-Zueyr.

The 55-year-old cleric has held several secret meetings with Mugabe in his sumptuous, heavily-guarded palace in the Zimbabwean capital of Harare, where the population is near starvation.

MI6 intelligence deep cover officers in the country have been told by informers that the British-hating Mugabe has received substantial amounts of money for allowing the terrorists to hide in the remote Matabeleland and in the Mateke Hills close to the virtually unprotected northern boarders with South Africa.

Keep in touch with the most important breaking news stories about critical developments around the globe with Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin, the premium, online intelligence news source edited and published by the founder of WND.

Secret Intelligence Service agents believe that Mugabe's money is now deposited in several European banks.

Already, fear of a terrorist attack had led thousands of soccer fans to cancel plans to go to South Africa for the games, the first time ever the event is being held on African soil.

The South African government has admitted a no-show crowd would create a financial disaster in a country still trying to recover from the global depression.

Billions of Rand – the South African currency – already has been used to build new stadiums and hotels for the weeks-long event in June. Extra police have been recruited. South African diplomats abroad have been briefed on how to present South Africa as under no threat.

But an MI6 report identifies that al-Shabaab, which has been identified as the group that has executed Christians in Somalia, poses an increasingly "credible threat" to the estimated 25,000 British fans still expected to attend matches in which England or the United States will play.

For the complete report and full immediate access to Joseph Fa



















 

 


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search