Military junta’s links with al-Quaida

LONDON - British intelligence agents working for MI6 in Africa have established that former President Robert Mugabe's top generals have met with two extremist terror groups linked to al-Qaida about plans for an "Islamic empire" in southern Africa. Zimbabwe would play a crucial role, according to a report in Joseph Farah's G2 bulletin.

The meetings were held while Mugabe was in Rome last week as a guest of the United Nations conference on the world food shortage.

Intelligence agents at the conference confirmed Mugabe was in daily touch with the generals to discuss details of their secret meetings with the PAGAD and Qibla groups -two of the most dangerous terror organizations operating on the African continent.

“The purpose was to see how the groups could provide the arms that China failed to deliver recently when the ship’s cargo was turned away from African ports and forced to return to China,” confirmed a senior intelligence source.

The meetings were held in Bulawayo in a government safe house.

Chairing the discussions was Constantine Chiwenga, the country’s overall military chief. With him were Augustine Chihuri, the Zimbabwe chief of police; Paradzai Zimondi, head of the prison service, and Air Marshal Perence Shiri, the commander of the country’s air force. All four fought in Mugabe’s guerrilla force during the war against white rule in the 1970s.

An MI6 intelligence analyst described the quartet as “the junta which is now running Zimbabwe on a daily basis. It was they who stopped Mugabe from quitting when he lost the first presidential election in March. It was they who ordered the attack on British and U.S. diplomats last week and control the continued campaign of terror against the MDC.”

The junta’s links with Qibla and PAGAD have raised serious concerns within MI6 and other Western intelligence services that Zimbabwe soon could face a full-scale blood bath. – World Net Daily

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