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TERROR WARS
Islamist attackers in Niger not from Libya: PM
by Staff Writers
Brussels (AFP) May 27, 2013


The Islamists who carried out two attacks last week in Niger which left more than two dozen people dead did not come from Libya, as charged by the Niger authorities, Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan said Monday.

Such allegations "are without basis," Zeidan said after meeting EU President Herman Van Rompuy in Brussels.

"It was (former dictator Moamer) Khadafi who exported terrorism," Zeidan said, insisting: "The new Libya will not tolerate that."

Niger President Mahamadou Issoufou said Monday that the attackers who bombed an army base and French-run uranium mine entered the country from southern Libya, where he warned further attacks were being planned on Chad.

Two Islamist groups claimed Thursday's attacks in northern Niger, calling them retaliation for the country sending troops to help a French-led campaign against Al-Qaeda-linked insurgents in Mali, in which Chad is also involved.

Prime Minister Zeidan also called on Niger to hand over Saadi Khadafi, one of the former dictator's sons, and other officials who he said had sought asylum in the west African country.

Zeidan told Van Rompuy that Libya was determined to break with the past and would do its utmost to police its borders.

EU leaders agreed last Wednesday to send a civilian border assistance mission to Libya to help the country re-establish effective controls at its land, sea and air borders.

Van Rompuy said he had told Zeidan that Libya had the EU's full support as it built a society based on human rights and democracy.

"I have also expressed the EU concerns at recent events, including the attack on the French Embassy in April, that expose the serious security challenges that Libya is facing today," Van Rompuy said, adding that the prime minister had assured him steps were being taken to improve security.

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TERROR WARS
British soldier murder suspect was held in Kenya
London (AFP) May 26, 2013
One of the main suspects in the brutal murder of a soldier in Britain was arrested in Kenya three years ago and questioned over alleged links to a group of Islamist insurgents, it emerged on Sunday. The Kenyan government confirmed that Michael Adebolajo was detained in 2010 under a false name and handed over to British intelligence agents. "He was arrested under a different name, a fake ... read more


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