Morocco foils terror plot on security sites

Vehicles of Morocco's Police and Auxiliary Forces are deployed in northern Morocco on September 30, 2024. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 01 February 2025
Follow

Morocco foils terror plot on security sites

  • Moroccan authorities believe the suspects had direct ties to a Daesh leader in the Sahel who had recruited and indoctrinated them through digital communication platforms, according to preliminary investigations

RABAT: Moroccan counterterrorism police said they foiled a plot to “attack security sites” as four people suspected of links to Daesh in the Sahel were arrested.
Habboub Cherkaoui, head of the Central Bureau of Judicial Investigations, said in a press conference in Sale that the operation had prevented a “dangerous terrorist plot.”
The four suspects, all Moroccans including three brothers, were taken into custody on Sunday in Had Soualem, near Casablanca, according to an earlier police statement.
Cherkaoui said the group had pre-recorded a statement claiming responsibility for the planned attacks by using explosives.
Investigations later revealed they targeted “key security facilities, a supermarket and public areas” frequented by Moroccans and foreigners, he added.
Moroccan authorities believe the suspects had direct ties to a Daesh leader in the Sahel who had recruited and indoctrinated them through digital communication platforms, according to preliminary investigations.
He said the suspects were aged between 26 and 35 and had worked “modest jobs.”
Cherkaoui said jihadist groups in Africa posed a “real threat to the kingdom.”
He said 130 Moroccan nationals have traveled to extremists’ battlefields in Somalia and the Sahel since late 2022.
Many of them were “seeking to expand their groups’ activities into the kingdom,” the official added.
While the country has largely avoided terrorist violence in recent years, Moroccan security forces regularly report arrests and disrupted attack plots.

 


Three more vessels hit by projectiles in Strait of Hormuz, showing merchant ships remain in firing line

Updated 13 min 22 sec ago
Follow

Three more vessels hit by projectiles in Strait of Hormuz, showing merchant ships remain in firing line

  • A projectile hit a container ship in the Strait of Hormuz, setting it ablaze

DUBAI: Three vessels have been hit by unknown projectiles in the Strait of Hormuz, maritime security and risk firms ​said on Wednesday, bringing the number of ships struck in the region since the Iran conflict began to at least 14.
Shipping along the narrow strait has come to a near standstill since the United States and Israel began strikes on Iran on February 28, preventing exports of around a fifth of the world’s oil supply and sending global oil prices surging to highs not seen since 2022.
Iran’s Revolutionary Guards have warned that any ship passing through the Strait will be targeted. US President Donald Trump has threatened to ramp ‌up US attacks ‌on Iran if it continues to obstruct the strait.
The ​Thai-flagged ‌Mayuree ⁠Naree dry ​bulk ⁠vessel had been struck by “two projectiles of unknown origin” while sailing through the Strait on Wednesday, causing a fire and damaging the engine room, the ship’s Thai-listed operator Precious Shipping said in a statement.
“Three crew members are reported missing and believed to be trapped in the engine room,” Precious Shipping said.
“The company is working with the relevant authorities to rescue these three missing crew members,” it said, adding that the remaining 20 crew members had been safely evacuated ⁠and were ashore in Oman.
Images provided by the Thai navy showed ‌smoke pouring out of the back of the ship.
The ‌US Navy has refused near-daily requests from the shipping industry ​for military escorts through the Strait of Hormuz ‌since the start of the war on Iran, saying the risk of attacks is ‌too high for now, sources familiar with the matter told Reuters. Trump has said the US is prepared to provide naval escorts whenever needed.
 

TWO OTHER SHIPS SUSTAIN MINOR DAMAGE 
Earlier on Wednesday, the Japan-flagged container ship ONE Majesty sustained minor damage from an unknown projectile 25 nautical miles (46 km) off the coast of the United Arab Emirates, two maritime security firms said.
Its Japanese owner Mitsui O.S.K. Lines and a spokesperson ⁠for Ocean Network ⁠Express (ONE), its charterer, said that the vessel was struck while at anchor in the Gulf and inspection of the hull had revealed minor damage above the waterline.
All crew are safe, they said, adding that the vessel remains fully operational and seaworthy. The owner said the cause of the incident remained unclear and was under investigation.
A third vessel, a bulk carrier, was also hit by an unknown projectile approximately 50 miles northwest of the UAE coast, maritime security firms said.
The projectile had damaged the hull of the Marshall Islands-flagged Star Gwyneth, maritime risk management company Vanguard said, adding that the vessel’s crew were safe. Owner Star Bulk Carriers said the ship was hit in the hold area whilst anchored. There were no crew ​injuries and no listing.