J'ai envie de savoir es ce qu'il y a des postes pour le recrutement au poste de police de tizi ouzou poste administratif j'occupe déjà un poste comme adjoint de formation dans un centre de formation j'ai 10 ans d'expérience
Bacteria and viruses are ralely hard to use as weapons effectively. The better they are at killing (without being so good they kill one or two victims before it can spread) the harder they are to work with. I could see AQ having to learn this the hard way but most governments would have better consultants than AQ. And while there is a psychological benefit to terrorism via biological agents, It's ralely not a cost effective use of resources even for them - far less for intelligence agencies or the like. So a failed attempt by AQ is plausible but it would not be as great a threat as it sounds. When the news of this event became public some pundits claimed that AQ was terrified that people trying to escape the outbreak would show up at other AQ camps across the region. No such luck unfortunately.It is probably of equal or greater likelihood that this was a natural outbreak as the AQ camps in Algeria tend to be remote, in caves and have weak health and saftey regulations. ;-) Plague is endemic there in the mammal population but fortunately the conditions needed for wide spread outbreaks are not. Unless you sleep in caves and tents next to your food supplies and the mice and rats need to scurry over you on their way to their midnight snack. Spending money on ammo rather than antibiotics probably doesn't help much either.