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.”
Temperatures in northern Taiwan are forecast to reach as high as 30°C today, as an ongoing northeasterly seasonal wind system weakens, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. CWA forecaster Tseng Chao-cheng (曾昭誠) said yesterday that with the seasonal wind system weakening, warmer easterly winds would boost the temperature today. Daytime temperatures in northern Taiwan and Yilan County are expected to range from 28°C to 30°C today, up about 3°C from yesterday, Tseng said. According to the CWA, temperature highs in central and southern Taiwan could stay stable. However, the weather is expected to turn cooler starting tonight as the northeasterly wind system strengthens again
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) yesterday expressed “grave concerns” after Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong (黃循財) reiterated the city-state’s opposition to “Taiwanese independence” during a meeting with Chinese Premier Li Qiang (李強). In Singapore on Saturday, Wong and Li discussed cross-strait developments, the Singaporean Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement. “Prime Minister Wong reiterated that Singapore has a clear and consistent ‘one China’ policy and is opposed to Taiwan independence,” it said. MOFA responded that it is an objective fact and a common understanding shared by many that the Republic of China (ROC) is an independent, sovereign nation, with world-leading
COOLING OFF: Temperatures are expected to fall to lows of about 20°C on Sunday and possibly 18°C to 19°C next week, following a wave of northeasterly winds on Friday The Central Weather Administration (CWA) on Sunday forecast more rain and cooler temperatures for northern Taiwan this week, with the mercury dropping to lows of 18°C, as another wave of northeasterly winds sweeps across the country. The current northeasterly winds would continue to affect Taiwan through today, with precipitation peaking today, bringing increased rainfall to windward areas, CWA forecaster Liu Pei-teng (劉沛滕) said. The weather system would weaken slightly tomorrow before another, stronger wave arrives on Friday, lasting into next week, Liu said. From yesterday to today, northern Taiwan can expect cool, wet weather, with lows of 22°C to 23°C in most areas,
Taiwan sweltered through its hottest October on record, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said yesterday, the latest in a string of global temperature records. The main island endured its highest average temperature since 1950, CWA forecaster Liu Pei-teng said. Temperatures the world over have soared in recent years as human-induced climate change contributes to ever more erratic weather patterns. Taiwan’s average temperature was 27.381°C as of Thursday, Liu said. Liu said the average could slip 0.1°C by the end of yesterday, but it would still be higher than the previous record of 27.009°C in 2016. "The temperature only started lowering around Oct. 18 or 19