The National - News

Trèbes attack shows the changing face of extremism

▶ ISIL depends on angry isolated young men. Too many in Europe seem to fit that profile

-

Innocent blood was spilled in the small towns of Carcassonn­e and Trèbes in southern France in an attack claimed by ISIL. Three lives were lost; plenty more were irrevocabl­y altered. Redouane Lakdim, 26, stole a car, killing a passenger and a policeman before taking hostages in a supermarke­t, injuring 16 people. He allegedly cried “I am a soldier of [ISIL]”, before demanding the release of the sole surviving suspect of the November 2015 Paris attacks. On Saturday morning, a gendarme who traded himself for a hostage died of his wounds. His heroism reminds us that humanity is stronger than hatred.

France has experience­d a period of calm following a sustained terror campaign, which began when gunmen stormed the offices of Charlie Hebdo in January 2015. Attacks followed in Normandy, Nice and Paris. The intervenin­g years have also seen brutal attacks in Barcelona, London, Stockholm and Brussels. Events in Trèbes are a grim reminder that full security is but an illusion in major cities and demonstrat­es ISIL’s latest strategies. In 2014, the world watched with horror as the group spread like a virus in Iraq and Syria. But today its “caliphate” is dead, and its fighters scattered across the region. Many will return to Europe. ISIL now bears the characteri­stics of a convention­al terror group, dependent on angry isolated young men to commit atrocities in its name. Too many in western Europe seem to fit that profile.

Lakdim bore the hallmarks of other previous attackers. Moroccan-born, he first became known to the French intelligen­ce services in 2014. He dabbled in petty crime, including drug-dealing, and lived with his parents and sisters in bleak social housing near the picturesqu­e town of Carcassonn­e. He may have visited Syria. The familiarit­y raises perennial questions about how to stop the increasing­ly well-trod path from disaffecte­d misfit to murderous militant. Government­s must be alert to radicalisa­tion. But they must also make attempts to draw in those on the margins with education and employment opportunit­ies. Neverthele­ss, today, in the aftermath of another cowardly attack targeting innocent civilians, we must maintain our resolve and pause to mourn the victims, including a gendarme whose self-sacrifice has propelled him into hearts and minds in France and far beyond.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates