Difference between revisions of "2016 Saumur Daesh Cell"

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|image_caption=L’église Saint-Hilaire-des-Grottes, the church close to which Deash materials were found by gardeners.
 
|image_caption=L’église Saint-Hilaire-des-Grottes, the church close to which Deash materials were found by gardeners.
 
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The discovery of the '''2016 Saumur Deash Cell''' arose from a chance discovery of gardeners in Saumur, [[France]]. On the afternoon of 21st September, they saw a white van leaving a cave. Investigating, they discovered a cache of materials indicative of a [[Daesh]] ([[ISIS]]) terror cell, including ISIS flags, audio/video equipment and a generator. Police were notified, only to later report a "false alarm" after the information had been passed up to the French Ministry of Defense.<ref name=sk/> It was later reported to have been an exercise.
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The '''2016 Saumur Deash Cell''' arose from a chance discovery of gardeners in Saumur, [[France]]. On the afternoon of 21st September, they saw a white van leaving a cave. Investigating, they discovered a cache of materials indicative of a [[Daesh]] ([[ISIS]]) terror cell, including ISIS flags, audio/video equipment and a generator. Police were notified, only to later report a "false alarm" after the information had been passed up to the French Ministry of Defense. It was later reported to have been an exercise, although local police denied all knowledge.<ref name=sk/>
 
 
 
==Sources==
 
==Sources==
 
[[image:2016 Saumur Deash Cell sk.png|left|thumbnail|490px|The report from the local newspaper ''[[Saumur Kiosque]]''.]]
 
[[image:2016 Saumur Deash Cell sk.png|left|thumbnail|490px|The report from the local newspaper ''[[Saumur Kiosque]]''.]]

Revision as of 08:22, 29 April 2017

Event.png "Terror drill"
2016 Saumur Daesh Cell(Operation Gladio/B) Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
3
Saumur Daesh Cell 2016.png
L’église Saint-Hilaire-des-Grottes, the church close to which Deash materials were found by gardeners.
Date21 September 2016

The 2016 Saumur Deash Cell arose from a chance discovery of gardeners in Saumur, France. On the afternoon of 21st September, they saw a white van leaving a cave. Investigating, they discovered a cache of materials indicative of a Daesh (ISIS) terror cell, including ISIS flags, audio/video equipment and a generator. Police were notified, only to later report a "false alarm" after the information had been passed up to the French Ministry of Defense. It was later reported to have been an exercise, although local police denied all knowledge.[1]

Sources

The report from the local newspaper Saumur Kiosque.
The report from the regional newspaper Courrier de l'Ouest.

Information about the 2016 Saumur Deash Cell appears to come from two original sources, both in French:[2]

  1. The most widely cited is from the regional paper Courrier de l'Ouest, of 22nd September 2016;[3]
  2. Supplementary information is available from the local paper Saumur Kiosque, also posted on 22nd September 2016.[1]

The same information was widely shared by national media outlets. Few if any appear to have connected it to Operation Gladio/B and the wave of false flag terrorism.

Discovery

The cave was situated on land close to the church of Saint-Hilaire-des-Grottes, by the Saint-Hilaire-Saint-Florent exit on the road to Gennes. Finding their key did not unlock the gate, gardeners used an alternative entrance to the land, only to see three men[1] get into a white van and leaving the place. Looking in the cave, they found Arab language newspapers, audio and video material and Daesh flags.[1]

Responsibility

The finders alerted local police, who in turn passed on the information to the state security forces. Information flowed for over two hours, with frantic enquiries being made. The Mayor of Saumur reports that this went up to the French Defence Ministry. It was then reported by the unnamed 'général commandant' of the Écoles Militaires de Saumur to have been an 'exercise'. In an echo of Ryazan, Jean-Michel Marchand denied that the local police had any information about the exercise.[1]

Reporting

Various commercially-controlled media outlets picked up the story.[4][5] Some subsequently removed it from their website.[6][7]


Rating

3star.png 17 July 2017 Robin  An important clue to the origins of modern "terrorism" in Europe
The page collects the evidence of a telling mistake by the "terrorists" employed by the French military. Corporate media quickly lost interest in the story.
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References