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Iberosphere

News, comment and analysis on Spain, Portugal and beyond

Al Qaeda

Bombing the road to democracy

May 18, 2011 by James Badcock Leave a Comment

It was the biggest terrorist attack on Moroccan soil since 12 suicide bombers killed 33 people in distinct locations in Casablanca eight years ago. Since the carnage on April 28, Moroccan police have arrested three men, and according to the information so far released by the Interior Ministry, the main suspect, believed to be a Moroccan man in his twenties, had planned to experience jihadist combat abroad in places such as Chechnya and Iraq, before turning his attention to a home-made bomb which he apparently took six months to construct. The location of the café made it certain that most of the victims would be Westerners, as was the case. But was this just a desire to spill … [Read more...] about Bombing the road to democracy

Filed Under: Featured, Iberoblog Tagged With: Al Qaeda, aragana cafe, jamaa el fna, King Mohammed VI, marrakech, marrakech bombing, morocco, morocco news, Morocco politics, morocco protests, terrorism

Baltasar Garzón: a judge too far?

May 25, 2010 by Nick Lyne 1 Comment

On Monday May 24, judge Baltasar Garzón began a seven-month stint at the International Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague. The move came 10 days after an emotional farewell from the Spanish High Court, where for the last 22 years he has presided over some of the country’s most infamous cases. He was suspended from his duties in Madrid after his nemesis, Luciano Varela, the presiding Supreme Court judge whose enmity toward Garzón is no secret, hastily brought forward trial proceedings into allegations that the magistrate had overstepped his authority by investigating the crimes of the Franco era. Varela’s decision was widely seen as a deliberate move to humiliate Garzón by preventing … [Read more...] about Baltasar Garzón: a judge too far?

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Al Qaeda, Baltasar Garzón, civil war, dictatorship, ETA, Franco, judge, luciano varela, magistrate, spanish civil war, The Hague, war crimes

FARC, ETA and Al Qaeda: the terror connection

March 24, 2010 by Marty Delfin 1 Comment

When the US Drug Enforcement Administration announced in December that it had arrested three suspected Al Qaeda operatives in Ghana and brought them to the United States to face drug-trafficking charges, investigators unveiled some astonishing allegations. The defendants had offered to help rebels of South America’s oldest active guerrilla front, the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), traffic cocaine into Spain using North African routes. While there had been speculation regarding such a connection in the past, this was the first time US law enforcement authorities had linked the dots between Islamic extremists and the FARC in a criminal indictment. Then in early March, … [Read more...] about FARC, ETA and Al Qaeda: the terror connection

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Africa, Al Qaeda, Arturo Cubillas, Basque, Basque community, cocaine, Colombia, DEA, drugs, Eloy Velasco, ETA, FARC, gas, guerrillas, Hugo Chavez, investment, Moratinos, oil, Pdvsa, Repsol, Roberto Saviano, terrorism, Venezuela, zapatero

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