ISIS is using
the PlayStation 4 network to recruit and plan attacks because it’s
‘more secure than WhatsApp’, intelligence experts warn, as special
forces are deployed on the streets of London with Britain on terror
alert.
The move is the biggest security response since the 2005 London bombings and comes after the sickening attacks in Paris on Friday night – the deadliest in Europe since the Madrid bombings in 2004 – that left at least 132 people dead.
In
Belgium, which appears to be at the heart of the terror plot, officials
believe that terrorists are using consoles to communicate.
Belgian
Minister of Home Affairs Jan Jambon said intelligence agencies have
discovered evidence of jihadis using the games consoles to communicate
with a special, hidden recruitment channel.
He told HNL.be: ’Playstation 4 is even more difficult to monitor than WhatsApp.’
Meanwhile,
special forces have been deployed to some of the capital’s landmarks
and busiest spots in the aftermath of the Paris atrocities.
Eighty-nine
people were killed after gunmen burst into the Bataclan concert hall
and took hostages before security forces stormed the hall.
People
were shot dead at restaurants and bars at five other sites in Paris. At
least 352 people were injured, of which 99 are critical. ISIS has
claimed responsibility.
It
is believed two of the bombers were carrying Syrian and Egyptian
passports. At least two others are thought to be French while several
could also be Belgian.
At least one of the attackers is believed to have passed through Greece as a refugee.
It
has been revealed that around 250 jihadists have returned to France
from Syria – but the number coming back to Britain is almost double
that.
Experts have also said there are as many as 2,000 people ‘of interest’ in the UK to MI5 and security services.
Speaking
on Newsnight, BBC Correspondent Richard Watson said: ‘In France, ten
people per week for the last five months have travelled to Syria and
many of them have come back.
‘In
the UK, 760 people are assessed to have travelled out to Syria. Sixty
people are assessed to have died fighting in Syria and half are back in
the UK already.
‘There
are 2,000 people of interest in the UK to MI5 and security service. The
question is how do you keep tabs on 2,000 people?’
He
also explained how the ISIS fanatics were using a ‘cyber caliphate’ –
protected by their own encryption software – where they plan their next
attacks.
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