http://allafrica.com/stories/printable/200501311197.html

 

Al-Qaeda's Secret Plan for Africa: Terrorise, Divide, Seize 

The Independent (Banjul) 
OPINION
January 31, 2005 
Posted to the web January 31, 2005 
Banjul 

The world has heard the sound of the African oil boom. So has al-Qaeda. The
continent has more than 75.4 billion barrels of proven reserves, edging
toward 10 percent of the world's total. Five large producers - Nigeria,
Libya, Algeria, Egypt and Angola -top the list of African oil exporting
countries. 

Lesser producers, such as Chad, are also in the mix. Sub-Sahara Africa
supplies as much oil to the United States as Saudi Arabia. Al-Qaeda sees
Africa as a prize well worth going after. It is a graveyard of failed
states, of corrupt governments whose power seldom goes much beyond capital
city shantytowns and of areas of Muslim radicalism. The problems of the
region are opportunities for Al-Qaeda. 

At the same time, al-Qaeda strategic moves in Africa serve its larger
purpose of attacking Western economies. In 2002, Ubeid al-Qurashi, a
pseudonym of an Osama bin Laden lieutenant, wrote an article saying that
Western economies cannot stand high oil prices. One way to strike fear into
the West, he wrote, is by repeated attacks on oil installations or on
tankers. After the attack on the French tanker Limburg, in October 2002, the
al-Qaeda political bureau described the attack as not merely an attack on a
tanker. Rather, al-Qaeda said, it was an attack against international
transport lines and an attack on the West' s commercial lifeline, petroleum.


Terror and attacks on Western economies are one part of al-Qaeda ' s grand
plan. A second part counts on the vulnerabilities in the continent that will
allow al-Qaeda to establish radical Islamism in one state after another.
Nigeria is a case in point. The tenth largest producer in the world, 95
percent of Nigeria's foreign exchange comes from oil. It has close to 25
billion barrels of proven reserves, and major explorations are underway for
more. 

Nigeria is a tempting target for al-Qaeda. According to Transparency
International, Nigeria is the most corrupt state in Africa. It is also a
state that has received the attention of Osama bin laden. In a tape
broadcast by Al-Jazeera television channel in February 2003, bin Laden urged
Muslims to unite and mobilise the Islamic nation to "liberate themselves
from unjust regimes". He named Nigeria as one of those nations where Muslims
should unite. 

Bin Laden's aim almost certainly was to foment civil war in Nigeria between
the Muslim north and the largely Christian south. Shari' a, Islamic law, is
the law in 12 of 36 states in Nigeria. Federal authorities largely have
leaved these 12 states to themselves, almost a de facto division of the
country already. Jihadist militants occasionally occupy towns in the north
as press gangs, forcing others to join them. 

The growth of al-Qaeda cells in Nigeria, particularly in the fertile
breeding ground of the north, give evidence of the growing radical Islamic
threat in the country. The increase in Islamic militancy and government
corruption and weakness entice al-Qaeda to step up activity in the country. 

Radical Muslims have already struck at the state in attacks on police
stations. In September 40 armed insurgents assaulted a police station,
killing its commander and two other officers. Several other police stations
have also been assault targets. Al-Qaeda usage of Nigeria as a
communications hub is also evidence of al-Qaeda aggression in Nigeria. 

The capture of al-Qaeda information systems operative in Pakistan led
investigators to Nigerian web sites and e-mail systems used by al-Qaeda to
diseminate information and instructions. Again, the weakness of the central
government with no regulatory policy over the telecommunications industry in
the country is what drew al-Qaeda to Nigeria. The breakup of the Nigeria
state is a real threat because of al-Qaeda. 

Angola is another African country with vulnerabilities attractive to
al-Qaeda. The country has been producing oil for decades, but the people
have benefited little from oil income. A United Nations official has said
that the Angolan people were becoming restless as the price of oil was
increasing but with no effect on the lives of the people. Seventy percent of
the people live in poverty and 80 percent have no access to medial care.
Civil strife is becoming a frightening possibility. 

An Angolan security service official has warned that al-Qaeda is trying to
gain a foothold in Angola through Muslim NGOs. Al-Qaeda's presence in
Angola, however, may be more than a foothold. The Pan-African News Agency
(PANA) has reported almost 3 percent of Angola's population of 11 million
are Muslim. Mosque construction, Islamic centers and Qur'anic schools are
all signs of Muslim growth in Angolan cities. Can al-Qaeda be far behind or
are al-Qaeda cells already up to something? 

The eyes of al Qaeda on these two oil-producing countries, Nigeria and
Angola, are looking beyond the replacement of existing governments with
Islamic states. If al Qaeda can triumph in Nigeria and Angola, seizing the
national patrimony of both states, it can continue its plan to wage economic
warfare against the West. It also will have seized a major income-producing
resource for its own ends. African security services and multilateral
organisations must be on alert to thwart al-Qaeda plans to terrorise the
continent, to divide its people and to seize its resources. 

 



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