Anonymous: ISIS Threatening Attacks In United States, Elsewhere Sunday

OpParisIntel, the Anonymous campaign against the Islamic State online, released a statement Saturday saying it had uncovered information regarding new terror plots "on Paris and the world" scheduled for Sunday November 22.

The goal is to make sure the whole world, or at least the people going to these events, know that there have been threats and that there is a possibility of an attack to happen. These attacks are allegedly to take place on Sunday.

"All proof was submitted to official authorities all around the globe days ago".

"But because they have not done anything with it yet and it's nearly the 22nd, we have [to take] matters into our own hands".

The Isis instructions come after the Anonymous group claims to have taken down 800 social media accounts linked to Isis members and has been spamming extremists with memes.

Federal Bureau of Investigation officials confirmed to WSB-TV 2 Atlanta that it is taking the reports seriously.

"This is a warning to anyone going to any of the events listed below or going to any event with a lot of people, church services included - but the risk of any churches outside Paris/France being targeted is low", the statement said.

Since January and the shootout at the Paris offices of French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo, which killed 17 people, the hacktivists claim to have closed down 149 websites, 101,000 Twitter accounts and 5,900 propaganda videos, according to an investigation by Foreign Policy.

Following the attacks that took place at Paris that left a shocking 129 dead, Anonymous has made a decision to take charge and put an end to the malicious activities of these terrorists with the only way they know best; hacking social media accounts.

Worldwide Business Times has spoken with Anonymous, and the collective said it has given its proof of the threats to the MI5 intelligence agency in the United Kingdom, the CIA and Federal Bureau of Investigation in the USA, and the Australian government but will not release it publicly.

The list of ISIS-related Twitter accounts that Anonymous claims to have taken down can be found here [Pastebin].

"If we share the proof [publicly], everyone will start calling it fake because screenshots can be edited and accounts can be deleted", Anonymous said.

The hacker groups does not plan to release the proof publicly.


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