LONDON — Terrorist group
al Shabab released a video Saturday calling for attacks on shopping
malls in the U.S., Canada and the U.K. The video, released by the
Somalia-based group's official media wing, calls for attacks in the
style of al Shabab's 2013 siege on the Westgate Mall in Nairobi, Kenya,
in which more than 60 people were killed.
Minnesota's Mall of
America, which was referenced in the video, said it was aware of the
threat. "We will continue to follow the situation, along with law
enforcement, and will remain vigilant as we always do in similar
situations," it said in a statement. The mall, which is America's
largest, has implemented additional covert and visible security
measures, the statement added.
A spokesman for the
National Security Council said the FBI and Department of Homeland
Security have been working in recent months with mall operators to
prevent and mitigate such attacks. "Protecting public safety and
national security is our highest priority," NSC spokesman Ned Price
said.
The Royal Canadian
Mounted Police said they were aware that al Shabab threatened the West
Edmonton Mall in Alberta in the video, but "there is no evidence of any
specific or imminent threat to Canadians in this video." The West
Edmonton Mall said in a statement that they have also heightened
security measures and "will remain vigilant."
London's Metropolitan police said they were "assessing the content" of the video.
Al Shabab was named a terrorist organization
by the U.S. Bureau of Counterterrorism in 2008, and the Somalia-based
group pledged allegiance to al Qaeda in 2012. In September 2013, the
group carried out a days-long attack on the luxury Westgate Mall, which left at least 67 people dead and about 200 injured.
Al Shabab said at the
time that it sent militants with AK-47s and grenades into the Nairobi
mall in "retribution" for Kenya's efforts to help the Somali government
defeat the extremist group.
During a conference
Thursday on countering violent extremism, President Barack Obama
announced a new digital communications hub that would allow the U.S.
work with the United Arab Emirates to combat "terrorist propaganda"
spread by groups like ISIS, Boko Haram and al Shabab.
Al-Shabaab
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