Gulf News

The post-Daesh deradicali­sation test

Western government­s must monitor the activities of the group’s members and re-integrate them

-

ver the past four years, Daesh (the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) has brought murder and mayhem across broad swathes of Syria and Iraq and the terrorist organisati­on tried to establish its so-called caliphate. Within the territorie­s it once controlled, Daesh tried to impose its own strict and heretic version of extreme Islamist philosophy and theology, backed by the brutalisat­ion of civilian population­s and imposition of brutal and swift punishment­s to those who were noncomplia­nt or opposed the group’s views. Only an internatio­nal effort and the loss of too many lives brought this menace to an end. But while the ‘caliphate’ may be gone, the issue now is what to do with the thousands of foreign terrorists and supporters who flocked to join the organisati­on and its territory?

European Union officials estimate that 5,000 from across the 28-member bloc had left to join Daesh, becoming important supporters of the terrorist setup. From Canada, some 200 nationals signed up, and every western nation has now to deal with those who managed to survive the brutal fighting to rid Syria and Iraq of the Daesh scourge. Indeed, it’s estimated now that 1,200 former Daesh terrorists have now returned to Europe, and are presenting a difficult conundrum for nations such as France and the United Kingdom. Right now, the bulk of former terrorists are held in Iraq. It is a nation that can ill-afford to adequately deal with these numbers, and it is also unfair of foreign nations to expect the government in Baghdad to do so alone. Certainly, Iraq has more than enough of its own share of troubles to deal with.

While government­s of western nations have reason to fear that the former Daesh terrorists and sympathise­rs pose a significan­t terror threat, they must somehow form cohesive policies to manage the deradicali­sation of these individual­s, and re-integrate them back into their societies. It is simply not acceptable to refuse reentry and make these former Daesh supporters effectivel­y stateless. Doing that will surely perpetuate and propagate support for a return of the ‘caliphate’.

Jailing the individual­s is also not an option either. All those who believe that this is a solution need to look at the prison gulag in Guantanamo Bay to see how that has fared — particular­ly when jurists and civil rights groups rightly take up their cause. What is needed now is a holistic approach, one that effectivel­y re-integrates them, deradicali­ses them, while monitoring their activities very closely. That is the best hope.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates