The Ministry of Foreign Affairs yesterday dismissed a Facebook message allegedly linked to the Islamic State (IS) group that threatened to launch an attack against Taiwan next week.
The ministry said they reached the conclusion that the threat was not genuine one day after a Facebook user, identified as “Elias Allah Fifa,” posted a picture on the Anonymous Asia Facebook page, with the message: “You wait for it, Allah will achieve 12/28 Taiwan/Taipei.”
The picture featured the flag of the IS — which the user also used as their profile picture — and a Republic of China (ROC) flag. The user’s Facebook account was already closed by the time Anonymous Asia alerted the authorities, the ministry said.
Photo: CNA
“It is difficult to trace the account as it has been closed. Nevertheless, people are urged to avoid crowded places on that day” Anonymous Asia said on Wednesday.
It added that it would forward any further evidence to the Ministry of National Defense and local police stations should they become available.
The ministry’s Department of West Asian and African Affairs Director-General Chen Chun-shen (陳俊賢) told a news conference in Taipei that a preliminary investigation concluded that the account was most likely fake, since the pseudonym it adopted bore similarity to a foreign soccer player’s name.
“Most importantly, the IS flag posted by the user was mirrored. As the group’s flag bears a declaration of the Islamic faith that reads: ‘There is no god but Allah. And Mohammad is his Prophet,” no member of the extremist group would ever place the flag in reverse,” Chen said.
Chen said the ministry would still handle the matter with caution and vigilance, and strive to maintain public safety.
He urged people to refrain from breaking the law by fabricating rumors about terrorist attacks by the IS over the Internet, since the group has been issuing actual threats against numerous nations.
Fear of an attack by the IS has been growing in Taiwan since the nation’s flag was featured in a video last month, believed to be produced by the IS, alongside the flags of 59 other members of the US-led coalition against the militant group.
The video threatened to let the “flame of war” burn the coalition members in the “hills of death.”
FUKUOKA SITUATION: Japanese media reported that the pathogen is expected to be identified by the summer, while the CDC downplayed the idea that it was hMPV A “mysterious cold-like illness” reported in Japan’s Fukuoka Prefecture does not seem to be a new disease, but Japanese authorities have been asked about the situation, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) said yesterday. The Fukuoka Prefectural Medical Association on Wednesday told a news conference that a “mystery cold” that has become a hot topic on social media is “highly likely to be caused by some kind of viral infection,” Japan’s KBC News reported. “Many people are experiencing symptoms starting with a sore throat, followed by a runny nose, phlegm and a severe cough,” KBC News reported, citing association officials. Health authorities are
Nvidia Corp CEO Jensen Huang (黃仁勳) arrived in Taiwan yesterday ahead of upcoming AI and technology events, saying he plans to meet with clients and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Chairman C.C. Wei (魏哲家) during his visit. After landing at Taipei Songshan Airport, Huang posed for photos with fans and handed out Yakult drinks to reporters and supporters waiting at the scene, saying he has “a lot to do” during the trip. Asked about reports that Nvidia’s planned headquarters site in Taipei’s Beitou Shilin Technology Park could break ground on May 27, Huang said that if the company holds an event, he would
Carrefour Taiwan is to begin using a new name from the start of July, but it cannot divulge the name until then, the chairman of the supermarket chain's parent company said today. President Chain Store Co chairman Lo Chih-hsien (羅智先) was asked by reporters after a shareholders' meeting to confirm whether the company has settled on a new name for the supermarket brand. In March, the government-registered name of two Carrefour Taiwan branches was quietly changed to "Le Chia Kang" (樂家康) in Chinese, raising speculation that has been selected as the name. Lo said that because of local regulations and contractual obligations, the
The Philippines would likely be involved in any conflict over Taiwan due to its proximity to the democracy claimed by China, President Ferdinand Marcos Jr said, reiterating a stance that risks angering Beijing. “In the Philippines, we do not have a choice because Taiwan is so close to the Philippines and we have almost 200,000 Filipino nationals living and working in Taiwan,” Marcos said in an interview with Japanese media in Manila on Monday. The Philippine leader’s comments come ahead of a state visit to Japan next week, where he is to meet with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to discuss security