The National - News

AL QAEDA RECRUITS FIGHTERS FROM ISIL IN SYRIA

▶ 100 go through ‘re-radicalisa­tion’ programme to boost extremist ranks

- GARETH BROWNE

Al Qaeda-linked rebels in northern Syria are using “re-radicalisa­tion” programmes to lure fighters from its rival extremist group ISIL and expand its numbers.

In Idlib province, the rebel coalition Hayat Tahrir Al Sham, dominated by the Al Qaeda-linked Jabhat Fatah Al Sham, has put “between 100 and 150” ISIL militants through the scheme so far, security sources told The National.

The programmes run by the coalition last up to two weeks. Indoctrina­tion has taken place in the desert region of Abu Dhahur, east of Idlib, the scene of recent fighting between the coalition’s fighters and those of the Syrian regime.

“This is one of the clearest examples of how Daesh members can blend into other violent extremist organisati­ons,” said a security source.

Graeme Wood, author of The Way of the Strangers: Encounters with the Islamic State, said the “re-education” effort would probably evolve around “who is a Muslim and who is beyond the fold of Islam”.

“There is a great deal of overlap between the official ideologies of HTS and ISIL,” Wood said.

But as a group, ISIL is considered more extreme in its use of takfir, the act of accusing other Muslims of apostasy.

Before its rise, many countries began de-radicalisa­tion programmes to try to turn extremists back into civilians who do not present a security risk.

Officials behind a programme in Saudi Arabia set up in 2004, that tried to de-radicalise hundreds of extremists, claim recidivism rates of between 10 per cent and 20 per cent – significan­tly lower than regular crimes.

There were several high-profile failures including two members of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula who returned to militancy after being enrolled in the programmes.

This month, Nigeria released 244 former Boko Haram fighters whom it claimed to have “rehabilita­ted”, and similar attempts have been conducted as far afield as Yemen and Malaysia.

But the schools ran by Hayat Tahrir differ in that they “are attempting to convert people from one violent set of beliefs to another”, said Wood.

William Baldet, a counter-extremism specialist who works in the British government’s Prevent programme, said that his work tended to focus on a “disengagem­ent from violence, and trying to dilute the influence of violent ideology”.

“It wouldn’t surprise me if they were watching how other countries carry out de-radicalisa­tion and learning from that,” Mr Baldet said. Security sources told The National that the programme had come into existence mainly because of recent events on Syria’s battlegrou­nds.

In recent weeks, the Idlib-based groups have seen the start of a significan­t offensive on territory under their control but now under pressure by forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Al Assad.

But an increased role being played by Hayat Tahrir’s most radical members is also to blame.

“Previously, the group had an execute-on-sight policy towards arriving ISIL fighters, but more recently hardline elements have succeeded in persuading the group to assimilate some of these people,” one source said.

Despite the crumbling of ISIL’s so-called caliphate in Iraq and Syria, there are thought to be thousands of its fighters dispersed across Syria, Iraq, Turkey and beyond.

In October, it was reported that ISIL members and their families had been allowed to flee the Syrian city of Raqqa as it was recaptured by the Kurdish-dominated Syrian Democratic Forces.

ISIL and Hayat Tahrir remain fierce enemies on the battlefiel­d. ISIL fighters have fought and successful­ly captured more than 20 villages from the coalition in Northern Hama in the past week.

In other parts of Idlib and Hama the two groups have clashed on an almost daily basis over the past few months.

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