In February 2009, the BSAA West Africa HQ obtained evidence that a suspected arms dealer, Ricardo Irving, was conducting business in the Kijuju Autonomous Zone, selling modified Plaga parasites to an Islamist terrorist group. This change in career fit well with Alomar's prior experience with the guerillas, as SOAs tended to operate in plainclothes as observers during SOU operations. Alomar's time in the branch was short, and after eight months she was reassigned as an SOA. Alomar passed BSAA training with praise for her marksmanship and martial arts, and she was assigned as an SOU operator to the West Africa branch under Cpt. This did not, however, prevent rumours of her being a survivor of a bioweapons incident spreading. For political reasons her previous ties to terrorism and bioweapons were kept confidential. BSAA career įollowing graduation, Alomar enlisted in the Bioterrorism Security Assessment Alliance on the advice of her guardian, who himself received a position within the Bioterrorism Assessment Committee which oversaw the organisation. At the age of either seventeen or eighteen, Alomar was enrolled at university. Within six months she had mastered English, and advanced in her education, both catching up to her peers and excelling them. After two days in detention, the guerillas were freed, with Alomar escorted out of the country by plane with a US passport provided to her by the American spy, who became her legal guardian for the rest of her adolescence. Immediately after, the building was raided USSTRATCOM agents belonging to the Anti-Umbrella Pursuit and Investigation Team the Umbrella broker was disappeared, while Alomar and the other guerrillas were dragged to the US consulate to avoid interference from the corrupt government. Three days after the meeting, Alomar made her decision to help them by leaving a door unlocked at a building being used for the transaction and, wearing a wire, obtained vocal evidence of the illicit deal. Taking pity on her, they slipped her information regarding a bioweapons deal being conducted between the Umbrella and the guerillas, who had in secret eschewed their previous anti-capitalism and anti-colonial beliefs in favour of weapons to serve their insurgency. In 2001, Alomar got the attention of British and American spies active in the region. Over the next seven years, Alomar lived with the guerillas at their camps, initially fulfilling menial roles such as laundry and cooking, but later on being given firearms training as a child soldier under the belief that a teenage girl would be the least likely to draw attention. During her recovery with them, the fighters were able to radicalise her by revealing their knowledge of the classified nature of the accident, and that the government collaborated in the cover-up. After two days of running, she collapsed on a cold night, but was rescued by guerrilla fighters operating in the savannah who had happened upon her while driving. 57 Plant, Alomar ran away across the savannah in search of her former home. Some two months after the incident at the No. Resident Evil 2 Review - RE-vived NightmaresĢ2 January 2019 Guerrilla involvement Having had a more prosperous upbringing, Alomar's health quickly deteriorated due to malnutrition, made worse by Umbrella refusing to set-up a compensation scheme for victims' families. Unable to stay in the town, Alomar left to live with him and her seven cousins. Alomar herself was rescued by an uncle a day later, who had presumed everyone dead and had intended to loot the house of its possessions. The following day, Umbrella and the government announced that an accident had taken place at the plant, resulting in the deaths of all workers there. Alomar herself escaped the massacre by hiding. As the outbreak escalated, the local USS garrison acted on orders to massacre the entire town's population, both resolving the biohazard threat and silencing witnesses. In 1994, Umbrella initiated a t-Virus combat data experiment, infecting one of the workers who would serve as Patient 0 for an outbreak. Kept safe from the troubles in more rural areas, the family lived in a relatively prosperous company town, where as much as three quarters of the population held jobs at Umbrella No. Alomar grew up at a time of regional instability in West Africa as Soviet-backed paramilitary forces gave way to quasi-nationalist guerrilla warfare.
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