Kuwait Times

Chess, therapy for ex-militants at Syria rehab

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MAREA, Syria: In a rehabilita­tion center in northern Syria, young men huddle over an innocuous game of chess and some cigarettes - activities they once brutally suppressed as Islamic State group militants. Based in the rebel-held town of Marea, the Syrian Centre for Countering Extremist Ideology is home to around 100 onetime IS fighters from Syria, the Middle East and even Europe. “I used to dream of establishi­ng an Islamic state... but now, we take courses that clear up what’s wrong with what we once believed,” 23-year-old Mohammad Haj Ahmad says.

Ahmad hails from Raqqa, the northern city that served as the de facto capital of a now-collapsed militant “caliphate” sprawling across Syria and Iraq. He joined IS in 2014 and took part in one of its most gruesome battles at Tabqa airport near Raqa, where militants executed more than 200 army troops. “I was completely convinced by their slogans about jihad, that they were the only ones implementi­ng religion correctly, and that everyone else was an infidel and an apostate,” he tells AFP. “My father was scared I’d be convinced to blow myself up.”

Now, Ahmad and fellow ex-militants are undergoing intensive rehabilita­tion courses in Marea aiming to wash away extremist habits so they can ultimately reintegrat­e into society. Ahmad doesn’t know what he will do once he is cleared by rebel authoritie­s to leave the center. “Maybe I’ll start a business, continue my studies, or go to Europe,” he shrugs.

The two-storey center in Marea opened on October 27. “We founded the center because of the many fighters coming to northern parts of Aleppo province after the collapse of IS, which created a security problem,” says its head, Hussein Nasser. Some lodgers checked in voluntaril­y, while others are undergoing therapy as part of the jail sentence dished out by rebel authoritie­s for joining IS. They are split into three categories: Shortterm IS fighters, those who fought heavily or for an extended period and foreigners from Tunisians to Uzbeks.

Treatment lasts up to six months, which can be renewed, Nasser says. The administra­tors, doctors, and activists who run the center coordinate closely with rebel authoritie­s, particular­ly the court system. “The center’s lecturers provide an assessment to relevant judicial authoritie­s, who decide if the person can be integrated into society or not,” Nasser adds.

He says the center is financed locally but seeking additional funds to take in more foreigners and open a branch for female IS members.

Inside, patients shuffle into classrooms for group and individual therapy sessions as well as courses on Islamic law, civil rights, and psychology. Some sport beards and others are clean-shaven. Most wear an unofficial uniform of bright sweatshirt­s under sleeveless back vests. “The courses are similar to corrective treatment, giving them positive outlooks on themselves and their abilities,” says the centre’s psychosoci­al therapist Abdulkarim Darwish.

Darwish listens to their life stories, then runs therapy sessions to identify what social factors led them to join IS. During breaks, the ex-militants pray, eat modest meals on mattresses lined around a windowless room, and play chess - one of the many forms of entertainm­ent IS considered un-Islamic - or spend time with

their wives and children, who also stay at the center.

“I never thought I would turn into a militant,” says Hawas Al-Ali, 26, who quit his job as a cook in northern Iraq in 2016 and moved to east Syria. He joined an IS police unit deployed to bolster flailing militant fighting battalions. “My aim was the victory of Islam, but after a while I began thinking about returning to civilian life, society, my relatives and children,” says Ali. He checked himself into the center and now says he’s excited to return “to my life before Daesh (IS)”. Ali fears being arrested if he returns to Iraq, so for now is stuck in northern Syria and may travel to Turkey.

Ashraf Nasir, 24, says he is ready to become again an active member of a society which IS once terrorized. “I’m an essential part of society - I didn’t come from under a rock or from Mars, even though I joined Daesh,” he says. The problem, Nasir worries, lies in “how society will accept us”. Going home will be even harder for foreigners like Muslim Gadzhimeto­v. The Ukrainian entered Syria in 2016 coming from Turkey to join IS and earlier this year he was detained by rebels. Gadzhimeto­v says he decided to defect when he learned of the atrocities committed by IS against other Muslims. “I consider myself guilty for this,” he says. “Of course I want to socialize and so on, I want to return to civilian life. I dream about this life.” — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? MAREA, Syria: Syrian men attend a lecture at the Syrian Centre for Countering Extremist Ideology in this town in Aleppo district on Nov 30, 2017.
— AFP MAREA, Syria: Syrian men attend a lecture at the Syrian Centre for Countering Extremist Ideology in this town in Aleppo district on Nov 30, 2017.

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