domingo, 7 de febrero de 2016

domingo, febrero 07, 2016

Terror: The globalisation of extremism


A surge in Isis-claimed attacks suggests the ideology is extending its influence to Asia
 
Indonesian armed police clear the area near a Starbucks after a series of blasts hit Jakarta on January 14, 2016. An attack on Jakarta is over and no more perpertators are at large, police said on January 14, after gunfire and explosions left seven dead in the Indonesian capital. AFP PHOTO / Bay ISMOYO / AFP / BAY ISMOYO (Photo credit should read BAY ISMOYO/AFP/Getty Images)©AFP
Indonesian armed police secure Jakarta after attacks on the capital in mid-January
 
 
Gunmen hunting foreigners kill a Japanese farm expert in northern Bangladesh and an Italian aid worker in the capital Dhaka. Shia Muslims are targeted in a bomb blast in Pakistan that kills 24. In Indonesia, eight people are slain in an assault on civilians around a Starbucks café at a Jakarta shopping mall. A bomb explodes at a popular Hindu shrine in Bangkok, leaving 20 dead, including five Chinese tourists.

Terror attacks such as these in recent months — some claimed by Isis or its adherents — suggest that the Sunni Islamist extremist group and its violent, ultra-conservative ideology are successfully extending their influence to Asia from the Middle East and Europe.

In a world of instant connections via the internet and social media, the growing popularity of the Isis brand among young Asian Islamists should be no surprise.

Asia is home to about 1bn Muslims, nearly two-thirds of the world total, and has undergone waves of radicalisation in earlier decades.

The jihad that drove Soviet forces out of Afghanistan in 1989, backed by the US and Saudi Arabia, notoriously spawned the Islamist Taliban regime in Afghanistan and Osama bin Laden’s al-Qaeda.
The first decade of the new millennium saw the Indonesian Bali bombings of 2002, which killed more than 200, and the attack launched from Pakistan on the Indian city of Mumbai in 2008.

The fact that it has happened before, however, only heightens the anxiety among Asian and western governments about the latest, continent-wide surge in Islamist militancy — fuelled as it is by online recruitment campaigns and backed by a plethora of local extremist groups whose leaders are impressed by Isis and its wars in Syria and Iraq.
 
A risk analysis by consultancy IHS said the Isis terror attacks in Paris last November are continuing to drive south Asian Islamist factions, including the remnants of al-Qaeda, the Pakistani Taliban and the Jamaat ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh, into the arms of Isis.
 
Such groups would not receive much direct help from Isis and would rely on their own capabilities to keep attacking foreigners, government and military installations and religious minorities, Omar Hamid wrote in the report.

“However, due to the enthusiasm generated by the Paris attacks among jihadis, an increase in the number of attacks on these targets is highly likely over the next six months,” he said.


ISIS
 
 
Western governments are particularly concerned about Russia and central Asia, an important source of the foreign fighters who join Isis in the Middle East, and see radicalisation in other parts of Asia as well.
 
“Asia-wide, it’s more of a concern than people think for the governments concerned,” says one western official. “You’ve essentially had the globalisation of Islamic radicalisation, the Daesh [Isis] brand . . . though you still have a range of local brands.”

The slew of terrorist killings, including the Jakarta attacks and the hacking to death of liberal writers on the streets of Bangladesh, may finally lay to rest the notion that Asian Muslims are somehow less prone to radicalisation than their co-religionists in the Middle East.
 
While it is true that Indonesian Islam, for example, is often coloured by Hindu and other pre-Islamic traditions, that has not stopped puritanical Sunni groups such as al-Qaeda and Isis from finding eager recruits to murder innocents of any age or religion.

South Asia, with Hindu-majority India at its heart, is home to millions of mystical, music-loving Sufis and has Muslim traditions as varied, tolerant and syncretic as those of Indonesia.

Yet in Pakistan, nearly 60,000 civilians, security force personnel and militants have been killed in terror attacks and government crackdowns since 2003. Almost all the victims were Muslims.

Equally, it is hard to think of any country in Asia — except perhaps the Himalayan kingdom of Bhutan — that has not been affected by the rise of Isis and seen at least some of its citizens migrate to Syria or Iraq to fight for the organisation.

The Indian Ocean archipelago of the Maldives, a destination for wealthy tourists, is thought to have contributed about 200 Isis fighters, one of the largest contingents as a share of national population, according to the Soufan Group.
 
Domestic factors
 
Radicalisation is probably made easier by the tendency of Asia’s Muslim-majority governments and societies such as Malaysia and Pakistan to impose or adopt progressively more conservative rules. Neither increased conservatism nor the novel appeal of Isis, however, mean that Asian Muslims are a monolithic group fated to become ever more radical.

An examination of leading Asian countries shows they are buffeted by an array of influences, including ethnic separatism and political disputes as well as Islamism, religious bigotry and deep-rooted anti-western sentiment.

In some, Isis is only the latest actor to join in long-running extremist campaigns. In Afghanistan, for example, where a western-backed government under President Ashraf Ghani is struggling to ensure security, Isis is vying for influence with the Taliban, al-Qaeda and other Sunni groups.

There are signs that established groups in Pakistan have sought to form alliances with Isis. Had a militant group not cited revenge for “the killings of innocent Muslims in Syria” as the reason for its December 13 bomb in the mainly Shia town of Parachinar, the attack would have been just another example of sectarian carnage. But Lashkar-e-Jhangvi has for months been suspected of trying to become a branch of Isis.

“LeJ is trying hard to become enrolled in Daesh. They want money and weapons,” says one intelligence official.

SRINAGAR, JAMMU AND KASHMIR, INDIA - 2015/11/20: Kashmiri Muslim protesters display ISIS flag during pro-freedom demonstrations in old Srinagar the summer capital of Indian controlled Kashmir. Angry protesters took to the main street of Nowhatta area of old Srinagar and shouted anti India slogans soon after the Friday congregation prayers ended in Srinagars Grand mosque ,Police later fired numerous tear smoke shells and stun grenades to disperse pro freedom protesters. (Photo by Faisal Khan/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)©Getty
Kashmiri Muslim protesters display the Isis flag during november rallies in Srinagar


India detained 14 suspected Isis sympathisers shortly before the arrival of François Hollande, the French president, in New Delhi last week. With 170m Muslims India has one of the religion’s largest national populations, but they are rarely regarded as extremists and only a few dozen are thought to have left for Syria.

“Most of the Indians whom we know were attracted to Daesh were brought to our attention by their own family or community,” Shivshankar Menon, a former national security adviser, said in a recent speech. “What should worry us is the fact that 10 years ago we could say proudly that there was no Indian in al-Qaeda. Today we can no longer say so.”

And in Bangladesh, two strands of Islamic militancy have been prominent over the past year.

First, a group known as Ansarullah Bangla Team, an al-Qaeda affiliate, has murdered five liberal writers and atheists and circulated a hit list with many more names. Second, Isis claimed various shootings and bombings that killed foreigners, policemen and Shia Muslims and boasted of “the revival of jihad in Bengal”.

Last month, Singapore announced it had arrested 27 Bangladeshi men who were working on construction sites for supporting the ideology of al-Qaeda and Isis.

Onlookers gather following a suicide bomb blast at a Ahmadiyya mosque during Friday prayers in Rajshahi, some 250 kms from Dhaka on December 25, 2015. A blast in a mosque of Ahmadiyya Muslim Community at Rajshahis Baghmara Upazila killed at least one person and injured several others, police said. AFP PHOTO / AFP / STR (Photo credit should read STR/AFP/Getty Images)©AFP
Onlookers gather following a December suicide bomb blast at an Ahmadiyya mosque in Bangladesh

Meanwhile, Malaysian authorities say they have frustrated several plots and are concerned by the number of nationals who have gone to fight with Isis. The ruling United Malays National Organisation has also sought to bolster support among rural voters by emphasising its Islamic credentials.

Eager Alliance

In short, Isis may indeed have Asia in its sights. The latest issue of its magazine Dabiq talks of Islam conquering or reconquering “the cow-worshipping Hindus and atheist Chinese” from “Khurasan”, an imagined Islamic land centred on Afghanistan and western Pakistan.

But Asia is not yet as important for Isis as its embattled Middle East heartland or the temptingly vulnerable and nearby nations of Europe.

Asian militants, in fact, sometimes seem more eager to associate themselves with Isis than overburdened Isis leaders are to co-opt them. Isis is only one of many extremist Sunni groups in Asia, and its ideologues spend much of their time attacking organisations such as the Taliban that are ideologically almost indistinguishable from itself.

“Extremism is a spectrum in this part of the world and it is very difficult to draw the line,” says Sidney Jones of the International Crisis Group. “I don’t think Isis central is interested in Southeast Asia. I think Indonesians in Isis based in Syria are interested in showing they can put the region on the map.”

Few analysts think Asian countries face immediate threats to their existence from Islamist radicals. Indeed, it was just such a threat to the stability of Pakistan from its homegrown Sunni extremists that persuaded the armed forces to launch operations against the militant groups they had helped to establish. Islamabad has, however, been less willing to abandon the jihadis it finds useful: those destabilising neighbouring India and Afghanistan.

Like Indonesia and several other Asian countries, Pakistan can now boast of some successes in suppressing violent radicals who want to attack their fellow citizens . And, with the notable exception of Afghans and Pakistanis, most Asians can assume they are as safe as Europeans from attacks by Isis or its fellow extremists. Unfortunately — after the attacks of Paris, Istanbul, Bangkok and Jakarta — that is small comfort.

Regional picture: Local groups are being influenced by Islamist networks


China

Groups include: East Turkestan Islamic Movement

Beijing has stepped up its response to an insurgency in the northwestern region of Xinjiang, home to 10m Muslim Uighurs, since a 2014 knife attack in Kunming. It blames such attacks on ‘separatists’

Pakistan

Pakistani firefighters extinguish a fire in a vechile at the site of a bomb explosion at a market in Parachinar, the capital of Kurram tribal district on December 13, 2015. A bomb hidden in a bag ripped through a crowded bazaar in a mainly Shiite area of Pakistan's northwestern tribal region, killing at least 23 people and wounding more than 30, officials said. AFP PHOTO / M SAQLAIN / AFP / M SAQLAIN (Photo credit should read M SAQLAIN/AFP/Getty Images)©AFP
The aftermath of a December attack in Parachinar, northern Pakistan

Groups include: Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, Jaish-e-Mohammad, Tehreek-e Taliban Pakistan

TTP works directly to carry out attacks as well as through many affiliated groups; one intelligence official says LeJ is trying ‘very hard to become enrolled in Daesh [Isis]’

Afghanistan

Groups include: Afghan Taliban, Haqqani network, Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan

The government is struggling to rein in lawlessness, with the spillover felt in Pakistan to the south, and central Asia and China to the north and east


India

Groups include: Indian Mujahideen

Only a few dozen of the country’s 170m Muslims are thought to have travelled to Syria to fight. But India detained 14 suspected Isis sympathisers in New Delhi last week

Bangladesh

Groups include: Ansarullah Bangla Team, Jam’atul Mujaheddin Bangladesh

Ansarullah Bangla Team, an al-Qaeda affiliate, has killed liberal writers and atheists while groups linked to Isis have claimed responsibility for a spate of recent attacks

Thailand

Foreign suspect in the August 17 Erawan shrine bombing identified by the ruling junta as Adem Karadag (C) is escorted by Thai commando units as he takes part in a reenactment outside the shrine in Bangkok on September 26, 2015. Thai police on September 26 said Karadag, who was detained over last month's deadly Bangkok attack, was the main yellow-shirted suspect seen on CCTV leaving a rucksack at the shrine moments before the blast. AFP PHOTO / Christophe ARCHAMBAULT (Photo credit should read CHRISTOPHE ARCHAMBAULT/AFP/Getty Images)
A suspect in August’s Bangkok shrine attack is escorted by Thai commandos

Groups include: National Revolutionary Front

A long-running insurgency by predominantly Muslim ethnic Malays has claimed thousands of lives. Ethnic Uighurs from China were suspected of involvement in an August attack on a shrine in Bangkok

Indonesia

Groups include: Jemaah Islamiyah, East Indonesia Mujahidin

Despite the recent Jakarta attack the number of serious terrorist incidents remains small. But the authorities fear that returning fighters could revive local extremist groups

Malaysia

Groups include: Katiba Nusantara

Malaysian authorities say they have frustrated a spate of terror plots but are concerned by the number of nationals who have left the self-styled moderate Muslim country to fight with Isis in Syria and Iraq

Philippines

Groups include: Abu Sayyaf, Moro Islamic Liberation Front

There are fears the restive southern island group of Mindanao will ‘become a safe haven for everybody else in the region fleeing and an arms supplier’, says a security analyst



Additional reporting by Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad, Joseph Allchin in Dhaka, Michael Peel in Bangkok, Jeevan Vasagar in Kuala Lumpur and Tom Mitchell in Beijing

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