Sun.Star Cebu

UN study: Extremist fighters lack good education and jobs

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A U.N. study of 43 people who left their countries to become “foreign terrorist fighters” in Syria has found that most came from disadvanta­ged background­s, lacked good education and decent jobs — and saw their Muslim religion “in terms of justice and injustice rather than in terms of piety and spirituali­ty.”

The study for the U.N. Counter-Terrorism Center released Thursday said that based on interviews with the 42 men and one woman, a typical “foreign terrorist fighter,” or FTF, is most likely to be young, male and feel “their life lacked meaning.”

But Professor Hamed el-Said of Manchester Metropolit­an University and British terrorism expert Richard Barrett, who conducted the study, said beyond that it’s difficult to generalize why they wanted to go to Syria.

They cited “a mix of factors,” saying “social networks often seem to play a key role” and “equally important is the role and identity of the recruiters, who are not necessaril­y members of armed groups” but are more likely to be sympathize­rs.

Almost 40 percent of the sample said they were motivated to go to Syria by “an obligation to defend their fellow Sunnis from the Syrian government and its allies by force,” the report said. “This confirms that many Muslim youth, regardless of where they come from, perceive the conflict in Syria in community more than in religious terms.”

The authors said this perception of a duty to defend their group during a war “is an important element in understand­ing what may motivate an individual to become an FTF.”

Other responses confirmed “the lack of ideology” as a motivating factor, they said, noting for example that “very few of this sample believe in the idea of an Islamic State or of establishi­ng a caliphate in the Levant.”

According to a U.N. estimate in March 2015, there were more than 25,000 FTFs from over 100 countries.

The authors said that while the issue of FTFs has risen to the top of the political agenda in many countries, there is a lack of detailed knowledge about why people choose to join terrorist organizati­ons — and why some return home.

The authors stressed that their study is not a random sample, but they said it is one of the largest samples of face-to-face interviews conducted with FTFs, and therefore they believe the report “adds significan­tly to current research.”

Of the 43 people interviewe­d representi­ng 12 nationalit­ies, 33, or 77 percent, reached Syria but subsequent­ly decided to leave, the report said. The other 10 were either intercepte­d by authoritie­s in their own country or stopped en route to Syria by authoritie­s in a transit country.

The authors said 26 were interviewe­d in prison, and the remaining 17 in official premises or public places arranged by security officials from the host country, though generally not in their presence.

Despite an appeal to all U.N. member states, the authors expressed regret that only seven countries agreed to participat­e in the study — three from the European Union and four from the Middle East and North Africa.

The report said the participan­ts “claimed they did not go to Syria with the intention of becoming a terrorist, nor did they return with that purpose in mind.”

In Syria, most said the only military experience they received was a course on how to shoot with no bullets, “as shooting draws the attention of the enemy.”

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