From Counter Extremism Project <[email protected]>
Subject Extremist Content Online: Pro-ISIS Telegram Channels Call For Terrorist Attacks In France After Sentencing Of Paris Attacker
Date July 5, 2022 10:15 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the methods used by
extremists to exploit the Internet and social media platforms to recruit fol





<[link removed]>
<[link removed]>



Extremist Content Online: Pro-ISIS Telegram Channels Call For Terrorist
Attacks In France After Sentencing Of Paris Attacker



(New York, N.Y.) — The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the
methods used by extremists to exploit the Internet and social media platforms
to recruit followers and incite violence. Following the sentencing of Salah
Abdeslam for his role in the 2015 Paris attacks, pro-ISIS Telegram channels
called for attacks in France. ISIS released a propaganda video on several
websites via their self-proclaimed Iraq province titled “From the Land of Iraq
to the Lions of Africa.” In addition, after the passing of the Bipartisan Safer
Communities Act, a neo-Nazi website linked to James Mason and the National
Socialist Order condemned the new bill. Finally, CEP researchers found a video
praising the Christchurch terrorist on the website Anonfiles.



Pro-ISIS Telegram Channels Call for Attacks in France



On June 29, pro-ISIS Telegram channels called for attacks in France following
the sentencing ofSalah Abdeslam
<[link removed]> to life in prison
for his role in the November 13, 2015, Paris attacks in which ISIS terrorists
killed 130 people and wounded 350 at the Bataclan theater, Stade de France, and
nearby restaurants and cafes. Abdeslam was the only surviving attacker.
Nineteen other defendants were also charged, although five are presumed dead,
and one is currently serving a prison sentence in Turkey.



Pro-ISIS Telegram channels encouraged terrorist attacks in France in response
to Abdeslam’s sentencing. In addition to statements calling for acts of
violence, a channel posted infographics from ISIS’s Rumiyah magazine calling
for attacks using vehicles and knives.



ISIS Propaganda Video Released on Multiple Websites



On June 27, ISIS released a propaganda video via their self-proclaimed Iraq
province titled “From the Land of Iraq to the Lions of Africa.” The video is
the second in a series. Theprevious
<[link removed]>
video was released on June 23 via ISIS’s Syria province. Footage shows a group
of three ISIS fighters and an additional individual ISIS member congratulating
the successes of the group’s affiliates in African provinces and urging
immigration to ISIS-held territory in Africa.



The video was released on Telegram, Hoop, and a pro-ISIS website. CEP also
located the video on the Internet Archive, Facebook, and Odysee. The video was
still available on Facebook two days after CEP reported it. The video was not
removed from Odysee after CEP reported it. The Internet Archive made the video
accessible only to logged in users after it was reported by CEP.



ISIS propaganda video “From the Land of Iraq to the Lions of Africa” on
Facebook, two days after CEP reported the video for violating the website’s
policies. The video had 865 views on June 30. The video was modified, included
having the introduction removed, a logo placed on the bottom right, and color
modified, to evade being removed by Facebook.



Neo-Nazi Website States that White Supremacists Will Be Impacted by
Congressional Gun Control Bill



On June 27, a neo-Nazi website linked to James Mason
<[link removed]> and the National
Socialist Order
<[link removed]>
(NSO) condemned the Congressional gun safety bill known as theBipartisan Safer
Communities Act
<[link removed]>
. Passed by Congress and signed into law by President Joe Biden, the bill calls
for more in depth background checks for potential firearms customers below the
age of 21, federal funding for mental health and school safety programs, $750
million in federal grants to encourage states to institute red flag laws to
allow law enforcement to remove firearms from individuals deemed to be a threat
to themselves or others, and preventing the sale of firearms to individuals who
have been convicted by a court of abuse of unmarried partners.



The neo-Nazi website alleged that the bill, especially the red flag
provisions, would be used against white supremacists, citing the case ofKaleb
Cole <[link removed]>. Cole, a
Washington state leader of the Atomwaffen Divison, had several firearmsseized
<[link removed]> by Seattle
police in 2019 after a court declared him a threat to public safety. Cole is
currently serving a seven-year prison sentence for participating in a plot to
threaten and intimidate journalists and activists. The website further stated
that the bill would lead to increased surveillance and the attempted disarming
of the extreme right. The post claimed that the media focus on gun violence was
a Jewish controlled plot and that white supremacist terrorism is not a threat.
The website itself has previously advocated for acts of violence. The outlawing
and confiscation of firearms is a plot device in the white supremacist novelThe
Turner Diaries
<[link removed]>.



On June 30, an NSO member in Mississippi, Aubrey Sakai Suzuki, plead guilty
<[link removed]>
to making threats online in late 2020. Suzuki was arrested by the FBI on July
19, 2021 while he was picking up a firearm that he had purchased.



In addition to content from Mason, the website contains writing from former
members of the Atomwaffen Division and current members of the NSO and lists
members from the former as “prisoners of war.” On March 2, the site claimed
that the bulk of its readership was between the ages of 16 and 18.



Video Praising Christchurch Terrorist Located



On June 30, CEP located a video praising the Christchurch terrorist on the
website Anonfiles. The video claimed to be a documentary of the attacker’s life
and glorified him and his murder of 51 people. Anonfiles did not remove the
video after CEP reported it.



###





Unsubscribe
<[link removed]>
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Counter Extremism Project
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: n/a
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Iterable