Brazil probes Olympics threats after group backs Islamic State
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[July 20, 2016]
BRASILIA (Reuters) - Brazil's
intelligence agency said on Tuesday it was investigating all threats
to next month's Rio Olympics after a presumed Brazilian Islamist
group pledged allegiance to Islamic State (IS) less than three weeks
before the Games.
The SITE Intelligence Group that monitors the internet reported that
a group calling itself "Ansar al-Khilafah Brazil" said on the
Telegram messaging app on Sunday that it followed IS leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi and had promoted IS propaganda in Arabic, English and
Portuguese.
Brazilian authorities stepped up security measures following the
truck massacre in Nice last week, planning security cordons, further
roadblocks and the frisking of visitors in Rio de Janeiro for the
Olympics.
Police and soldiers took part over the weekend in drills near sports
facilities and along transport routes.
The Games start on Aug. 5 and are expected to attract as many as
500,000 foreign visitors.
"All threats related to the Rio 2016 Games are being meticulously
investigated, particularly those related to terrorism," the
Brazilian intelligence agency ABIN said in a statement when asked to
comment on the previously unknown group's claim of support for
Islamic State.
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"Many are dismissed and those that deserve attention are
investigated exhaustively," ABIN said. An agency spokeswoman
declined to comment on whether the posting by the group presented a
credible threat.
ABIN last month confirmed it had detected a Portuguese account on
the Telegram app that was a channel for exchanging information on
Islamic State but authorities said no threat had been detected of an
attack in Brazil.
Since Thursday's attack in Nice where a truck plowed through crowds
during Bastille Day celebrations, Brazil has sought to reassure the
international community that the Games will be safe and terrorist
threats are being taken seriously.
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Brazilian Air force soldiers patrol the Tom Jobim International
airport ahead of the 2016 Rio Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
July 19, 2016. REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
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On Monday, interim President Michel Temer issued a video message
inviting foreigners to come to Rio and enjoy the Games and the
beauty of the host city.
"We have reinforced security very much in the city and you can come
without worries. You can enjoy the marvels of Rio de Janeiro and
attend the Games," he said in the brief video.
Brazilian security officials say they are in close contact with
partner countries about any possible threats to the Games and have
been monitoring chatrooms and other communications among suspected
sympathizers of radical groups.
They said their biggest concern during the Olympics is not the
threat of a coordinated attack by known militants but the
possibility that a lone actor or group sympathetic to militant
causes could seek to target the event.
Brazil will deploy about 85,000 soldiers, police and other security
personnel, more than twice the size of the security deployment
during the London Olympics in 2012.
(Reporting by Anthony Boadle; Editing by Andrew Hay)
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