Business Standard

How India has turned into fertile ground for ISIS

The ranks of the self-radicalise­d youth subscribin­g to the ISIS ideology are growing across the length and breadth of the country, writes Sahil Makkar

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In May 2014, four Muslim youths, in their early-20s, from Maharashtr­a left India to join Islamic State of Syria and Iraq (ISIS), the most lethal terror organisati­on in the world. The youth reached Syria, took up arms and allegedly fought in the war.

Six months later, one of them, identified as Areeb Majeed, decided to come back after he was shot twice and survived an air strike by the United States-led collation forces fighting the ISIS extremists in Syria.

Majeed, 23, approached the Indian consulate in Turkey and sought an emergency certificat­e, a travel document issued in case a passport is lost, stolen or damaged, to return to India. He was arrested from the Mumbai airport in November 2014.

Majeed’s arrest was the first case where an ISIS operative was arrested in India. The National Investigat­ion Agency (NIA), India’s premier anti-terror probe agency, took over the case from Mumbai Police and tried to unravel ISIS’s nefarious plans in India through Majeed.

Investigat­ors and intelligen­ce sleuths learnt, to their surprise, many Indian youth, including engineers, had got attracted to the ISIS after the latter had begun taking control over territorie­s in Syria and Iraq in 2013.

These youths started out by searching for ISIS videos related to the war, brutal killings of journalist­s and foreign nationals, scripts that goad believers to burn liquor and cigarette factories, and material related to destructio­n of cultural heritage sites.

The jihadi literature was freely and readily available on social media, networking sites and mobile applicatio­ns.

These aspiring extremists also downloaded speeches of radical Islamic preachers such as Anwar Awlaki, Abdu Sami Qasmi, Meraj Rabbani, Tausif ur Rehman, Jerjees Ansari and Zakir Naik, besides regularly getting updates from the so-called ISIS magazine, Dabiq, which ostensibly convinced them that ISIS was fighting for the rights of the Sunnis.

A senior officer in NIA says the misguided youth didn’t have any direct links with the ISIS operatives in Syria. In fact, those running ISIS propaganda from overseas wouldn’t easily trust anyone trying to connect with them on the social networking sites.

“ISIS puts a possible recruit on watch for several months and it only communicat­es with him through various cryptic apps and websites, making it difficult for the intelligen­ce agencies to keep an eye on such people,” says the officer. “The recruits are called to Syria only if they are strongly recommende­d by someone within ISIS.”

The recruits, according to him, have to first sign a baya’a, which is an oath of allegiance to the caliphate, and then they are asked to send a scanned copy of the same through email to their online handlers. In this case, the baya’a was signed in the name of ISIS head Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the officer says.

Many youths left India on the pretext of performing Umrah, the pilgrimage to Mecca in South Arabia which can be undertaken at any point of time. From there they jumped ship and tried to reach Turkey, Iraq, and Mosul in Syria.

The Indian government said it has arrested 75 suspected ISIS terrorists so far who belonged to Kerala (21), Telangana (16), Karnataka (9), Maharashtr­a (8), Madhya Pradesh (6), Tamil Nadu (4), Uttarakhan­d (4), Uttar Pradesh (3), Rajasthan (2), Jammu & Kashmir (1) and West Bengal (1).

This is a change from a few years ago, when the then prime minister, Manmohan Singh, claimed that not a single ISIS operative had been found in India, though the country has the world’s second largest population of Muslims.

The data suggests that people subscribin­g to the ISIS ideology are present across the length and breadth of the country and it is increasing­ly becoming difficult for the law enforcemen­t agencies to keep track of them. This perhaps explains the failure of the intelligen­ce agencies to prevent the lowintensi­ty blast on the Bhopal-Ujjain train that injured 10 people earlier this month. The agencies, however, were quick to arrest eight accused and neutralise one in Lucknow’s Thakurganj area.

Officers in intelligen­ce agencies say not every accused travels to Syria and Iraq. Some got attracted to ISIS ideology while they were employed in West Asia. They were indoctrina­ted and sent to India to recruit local people for the cause. “A large number of Indian expatriate­s work in West Asia. Some have got radicalise­d and are suspected to be arranging funds for terrorist activities in India. They are channellin­g money through the hawala route,” says an intelligen­ce officer.

This has added a new dimension to the problem and made the work of the intelligen­ce agencies all the more difficult.

Last year, the police arrested five men in Hyderabad for allegedly hatching a conspiracy to carry out a terror strike in the country. The suspects had held various meetings, made efforts to join ISIS in Syria, and tried to recruit more men. NIA seized several electronic gadgets, mobile phones, hard discs, semi-automatic pistols, air rifle, pellets, target boards, chemicals used for making Triacetone Triperoxid­e (TATP) which was suspected to be used during the Brussels attack, capacitors, gas stove, cylinder, weighing balance, nails, knives, quartz alarm and bundles of wires.

Their interrogat­ion revealed another trend: the accused neither visited Syria nor were they influenced by those who had returned from West Asia — these men had got together and formed an organisati­on named Jhund ul Khilafa Fi Bilad al Hind (Army of the Caliph from the South India) on their own.

NIA says the accused used the deep web through the Tor browser, encryption applicatio­ns such as Amn al Mujahid (an encryption program by Al-Fajr Media Centre, an exclusive distributo­r of Al Qaeda’s Propaganda) and encrypted email systems to communicat­e with their overseas handlers.

“The accused recruited other members, contribute­d money, procured raw materials, mobile phones, SIM cards, firearms, ammunition and explosive in pursuance of the terror conspiracy,” says NIA.

Officers in the Union home ministry and in the office of the National Security Advisor (NSA, Ajit Doval) are worried on three accounts: one, they fear a lone wolf attack, similar to the attack outside the UK parliament this week; two, the presence of numerous and distinct modules which can be activated at short notice; and three, some radicalise­d youth approachin­g other terror outfits for logistical assistance — a network of ultras.

Security officers say the only way to keep a check on ISIS activities in India is to mount a roundthe-clock technical and human surveillan­ce of suspects

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 ??  ?? (Left) The Uttar Pradesh Anti Terror Squad during an encounter with a suspected terrorist holed up in a house in Thakurganj, Lucknow; (below) arms, ammunition and other items recovered from the house
(Left) The Uttar Pradesh Anti Terror Squad during an encounter with a suspected terrorist holed up in a house in Thakurganj, Lucknow; (below) arms, ammunition and other items recovered from the house

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