Al Qaeda is preparing an attack on a big financial centre in Asia, such as Tokyo, Singapore or Sydney, to undermine investor confidence in the region, France's top terrorist investigator says. In an interview with the Financial Times newspaper Friday, Jean-Louis Bruguiere added that several Asian countries are less prepared than Britain or the United States for such an attack.
"We have elements of information that make us think that countries in this region, especially Japan, could have been targeted" by the al Qaeda network, the investigating magistrate said.
"Any attack on a financial market like Japan would mechanically have an important economic impact on the confidence of investors. Other countries in this region, such as Singapore and Australia, are also potential targets."
Despite the threat, he added, "we are somewhat neglecting the capacity or desire of the al Qaeda organisation to destabilise" the region.
Commenting on the warning, Japan said it already had tight security in place. "It isn't clear how concrete this report is," said Chief Cabinet Secretary Hiroyuki Hosoda, the spokesman for the Japanese government.
"The Japanese government has already been co-operating internationally" to prevent attacks, Hosoda told reporters. "We would like to do our best so that no such thing happens."
Nicknamed "Le Sheriff," Bruguiere has been warning about the threat of Islamic terrorists since a string of bombings rocked Paris in the mid-1980s, the Financial Times recalled. He has overseen the arrest of more than 500 terrorism suspects over the past 20 years, heading up a specialist team of judges who work alongside anti-terrorist police and intelligence agents.
He warned of the danger of terrorists hijacking aircraft well before the September 11 attacks in the United States in 2001, after foiling a 1994 attempt by Algerian radicals to crash an Air France jet into the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
He said there were signs that Britain would come under attack well before the July 7 attacks on three London subway trains and a double-decker bus that killed 56 people, including four apparent suicide bombers.
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