The Spanish government said it is concerned that terrorists could use the Ebola virus as a biological weapon against the West. A close eye is being kept on online chat rooms, where such attacks are reportedly discussed among jihadist groups.
Extremists connected to the Islamic State (IS, previously ISIS)
have been considering using Ebola as a weapon against the West,
Spain’s State Secretary for Security, Francisco Martinez, said in
an address to the parliament.
Martinez stated that this type of activity serves as further
proof that the internet is an “an extension of the
battlefield” for the Islamic State, which uses cyberspace
for “threatening enemies through propaganda, preparing
operations, exchanging information, ideological training,
recruiting new members and acquiring finance.”
There are “many examples” of online terrorist chat logs
discussing the use of biological warfare against the West,
Spain’s RTVE public broadcasting corporation reported.
The most recent talks took place in a “jihadist chat
room,” related to the Islamic State, in mid-September.
“The use of Ebola as a poisonous weapon against the United
States” was the topic of conversation, Martinez said.
There were also a number of tweets that talked about the use of
“deadly chemical products from laboratories,” he added,
stating that terrorist organization Ansar al-Islam was involved.
Despite increasing evidence of biological attacks on the West, US
Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson denied allegations of the
Islamic State’s plans to use biological weapons. “We've seen no
specific credible intelligence that [the Islamic State] is
attempting to use any sort of disease or virus to attack our
homeland,” Johnson said earlier in October.
Canada imposes visa ban
The latest cases of Ebola in Spain and the US have sparked fears of an even bigger outbreak, prompting Canada to step up its border security so as to limit the risk of infection spreading into the country.
The federal government announced on Friday it is suspending the
processing of visa applications for residents and nationals who
have been in Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone in the last three
months. The same goes for permanent residence applications.
"New precautionary measures [are] to protect the health and
safety of Canadians,” the government said in a statement,
adding that the move does not affect Canadians in West Africa
helping to contain Ebola, adding that health workers will be
permitted back in the country.
Canada has become the second country after Australia to deny
visas to foreign nationals from the three affected West African
countries.
So far, about 5,000 people have died this year in Guinea, Liberia
and Sierra Leone, in the worst Ebola outbreak ever recorded.