Pro-ISIS website warns of further attacks in Spain

A pro-ISIS website has warned of further Spanish attacks from terror cells still embedded around the country.

The Wafa Media Foundation published a statement addressed ‘from the Islamic Republic of Spain to the Government of Spain’, saying: ‘The war has not been fought and gone’.

ISIS had claimed responsibility for the attacks in Barcelona and Cambrils last week which killed 15 and wounded more than 120.

A pro-ISIS website has published a statement promising further attacks on Spain from more terror cells embedded within the country

It comes after the terror group claimed responsibility for the attack in Barcelona (pictured) and Cambrils which killed 15 and wounded more than 120 

It comes after the terror group claimed responsibility for the attack in Barcelona (pictured) and Cambrils which killed 15 and wounded more than 120 

In the message, the extremists said Catalonia would be conquered like Gibraltar and Andalusia, which were once under Moorish control.

The attacks would be revenge for military operations in Bahrain, Iraq and Somalia, the statement said according to PJ Media.

As with most ISIS threats, the message provided no evidence to back up its claims

And while the terror group has claimed the latest Spain attack, there is no evidence that any of the group were in direct contact with its recruiters or had ever traveled to its camps for training.

It seems as if the group was actually radicalised by extremist imam Abdelbaki Es Satty who had links to al-Qaieda, which is an enemy of ISIS.

All 12 members of the terror cell which operated out of Ripoll, north of Barcelona, have now been accounted for, Spanish police say.

Eight of them are dead, including Es Satty and Barcelona van driver Younes Abouyaaquob, who was shot dead in Subirats on Monday.

Four more have been arrested – Driss Oukabir, Mohammed Aallaa, Mohammed Houli Chemlal and Sahal El Karib.

Police say the terror cell which carried out the attacks last week are now either in jail or dead. Pictured is Mohammed Houli Chemlal as he appeared in court on Tuesday

Police say the terror cell which carried out the attacks last week are now either in jail or dead. Pictured is Mohammed Houli Chemlal as he appeared in court on Tuesday

Driss was initially accused of driving the van at Las Ramblas that killed 13 after his identity documents were found inside, but later claimed they had been stolen by his brother Moussa, who was shot dead in Cambrils.

In court on Tuesday he changed his story, saying he did rent the vans himself, but thought they were for moving house.

Aallaa, whose two brothers died carrying out the attack, was arrested after his car was used to run people down in Cambrils.

Chemlal is accused of working in a bomb factory making explosives to be used in a much larger attack before it blew up accidentally, wounding him.

 Sahal El Karib runs an internet cafe in Ripoll, where all the attackers came from. His exact connection to the plot is unclear.

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk