The National - News

The quiet commune that became conveyor belt for extremists

A sleepy Carmargue town with a population of 25,000 has been dubbed ‘Jihad city’

- Colin Randall in Lunel

Little about Lunel, nestling in France’s serene, picturesqu­e Camargue region between Nimes and Montpellie­r, initially sets it apart from other small southern towns.

In cars or on foot, locals and visitors cross paths with Muslim women pushing prams along impossibly narrow streets. Come late afternoon, high-school pupils laugh and talk in the warm sunshine. Cafe society seems to be thriving.

But up to 30 inhabitant­s of Lunel succumbed to the lure of foreign fighting. Young men, radicalise­d under peer group pressure or by persuasive aspects of social media, headed to Syria or Iraq, and were followed by young women eager to be their brides. Eight of the men, including a Jewish convert said by acquaintan­ces to have changed almost overnight from being a Led Zeppelin fan to embracing militant Islam, were killed in the conflicts.

At a Paris trial in April, four of five Lunel residents accused of involvemen­t in fighter recruitmen­t or participat­ion were jailed for as long as seven years.

The town, despite an outward appearance of tranquilit­y, is “cut in two”, according to JeanPierre Berthet, a retired judge.

Mr Berthet, who heads a community group, Lune et Liens, that attempts to bridge gaps between the indigenous French and Muslim communitie­s, remembers his court in Montpellie­r sending, on average, one young Muslim from the town into custody each week for petty or drug-linked crime.

“It is no longer the case but only because policing here has been increased quite sharply,” he told The National.

But why Lunel? How did a sleepy French backwater of 25,000 people become what has variously been called “Jihad city”, “the French cauldron” and – in reference to the Brussels district that produced several of the attackers behind the Paris massacre of November 2015 – a “mini-Molenbeek”?

Mr Berthet and Muslim community workers in the town offer answers: the influence and power of the internet, high unemployme­nt, a lack of opportunit­ies that produces restlessne­ss, boredom. There is also a lack of identity common among young French Muslims.

One of the accused in the Paris trial, Hamza Mosli, treated as a ringleader and sentenced to seven years in jail, told investigat­ors: “I did a BTS (higher education diploma) in accountanc­y. At the end of it, all the indigenous French in my class found work. Only the two Arabs didn’t.”

Mosli’s brothers, Houssem and Sabri, were both killed fighting in Syria.

Tahar Akermi, the French-Algerian organiser of a youth and cultural centre, said joblessnes­s alone cannot explain a transition from normal if humdrum lives to terrorism.

And Mr Berthet pointed out that most of those in the Paris case had jobs while the Jewish convert to an extremist interpreta­tion of Islam came from a comfortabl­e family background.

Mr Akermi, 50, a veteran of 30 years working with young people, said: “The republic does give the impression of having turned its back on some of its population. The region of Occitanie is among the worst in France for unemployme­nt, the department of Herault is among the most badly hit parts of the region and the town of Lunel suffers as much as anywhere in Herault.”

But he refuses to accept that having no work should lead anyone to wish to “blow themselves up or go and do jihad”.

For Mr Akermi, the media and especially internet providers should bear greater responsibi­lity.

“Families often enough do not see it coming. If you have, say, five kids and four seem to turn out well, how do you stop the fifth becoming radicalise­d?

“Sooner or later, we have to accept that the internet, while a marvel in so many ways, can

also be a place where you find barbarity, bombings, killings.”

Mr Berthet says a “Salafist element”, although small, is still present in Lunel’s Muslim community.

Neither he nor Mr Akermi feel able to discount the possibilit­y of the town producing more would-be jihadists, although both feel the current situation at least seems under control.

An impressive mosque on the outskirts of the town draws about 1,500 worshipper­s to Friday prayers, from a catchment area stretching dozens of kilometres from Lunel.

Its leadership is more moderate than three years ago when the mosque’s president at the time, urged by the town’s centre-right mayor Claude Arnaud to speak out against radicalism, instead blamed France and said it was not for him to judge.

Among families of those who went abroad or were even killed, there is little appetite for talking openly. “The scars are too raw,” said one who knows most of them.

The local council, controlled by the mainstream right, although the far-right Front National is also strong, is reluctant to express itself, beyond a statement deploring recent history.

“Lunel is hard hit by the totalitari­an ideology of radical Islam, which is the gateway to Islamic terrorism,” it read. “Lunel calls on the state to put an end to this jihadist sector in the municipali­ty.”

In the face of clear divisions, perhaps what hope Lunel can allow itself comes from outside.

Jean Clementin, who works with Mr Berthet as the Lune et Liens treasurer, offers a heartening anecdote from a visit by Mourad Benchellal­i, previously held as a terrorism suspect in the US military jail at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba after being detained at an Al Qaeda training camp in Afghanista­n.

Among members of his family prosecuted for links to terrorism, his parents were expelled to their native Algeria. Mr Benchallal­i has always protested that he went with an older brother to Afghanista­n expecting an adventure holiday. Since his release, he has lectured young Muslims on the need to resist extremism and, in 2015, this work took him to a Lunel high school, the Lycee Feuillade, where he addressed a crowded hall.

“At the end, a young girl – I’d say she was somewhat Salafist – asked him how he could possibly go on living in such a country of non-believers,” Mr Clementin said. “He replied that his dearest wish was to bring his mother back to France.”

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 ??  ?? The town of Lunel, southern France, found itself at the eye of a hurricane after 20 people left to wage war in Syria. Residents are trying to find answers and go beyond recriminat­ions
The town of Lunel, southern France, found itself at the eye of a hurricane after 20 people left to wage war in Syria. Residents are trying to find answers and go beyond recriminat­ions

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