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Tuesday, April 16, 2024

ISIS next target – India?

According to reports by Indian intelligence, India may be under threat of ISIS activity

RT |

Suffering defeats in the Middle East, Islamic State may now eye India, setting up underground cells in various states of the world’s second-largest country, a local intelligence agency has reportedly warned.

India has become increasingly vulnerable to the threat of Islamic State-inspired (IS, formerly ISIS) terrorist attacks, according to NDTV, citing three intelligence letters sent to police chiefs in the state of Kerala.

IS once wreaked havoc in Syria and Iraq, where it established a ‘caliphate’ and enforced strict sharia rules

“After loss of territory in Iraq and Syria, IS is urging operatives to take up violent forms of jihad while staying back in their respective countries,” reads one of the letters.

The terrorist group may also target key installations in Kochi, Kerala’s most populous city with 2 million people, another one of the intelligence letters says. Local police officials estimate that roughly 100 Kerala residents have joined IS in the past few years, while around 3,000 have been “de-radicalized” and are now under surveillance.

Islamic State-affiliated mouthpiece reportedly announced the creation of the ‘Wilayah al-Hind’, or ‘Indian Province’

The southern state lies close to Sri Lanka, where terrorist attacks in April resulted in the deaths of more than 250 Christians celebrating Easter.

Read more: Police suspect Islamist terrorists for Sri Lanka Easter attack

The news comes after an Islamic State-affiliated mouthpiece reportedly announced the creation of the ‘Wilayah al-Hind’, or ‘Indian Province’. Shortly afterwards, the terrorist group said it had established an additional stronghold called ‘Wilayah Pakistan’.

IS once wreaked havoc in Syria and Iraq, where it established a ‘caliphate’ and enforced strict sharia rules. Now, the group is declining in the region following successful campaigns by Syrian government forces backed by Russia and the US-supported Iraqi military.

RT with additional input by GVS News Desk