Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

CHRISTCHUR­CH TERROR: CONCERNS FOR SRI LANKA

In Tarrent’s manifesto, he particular­ly wants the death of German Chancellor Angela Merkel Anders Breivik killed more than 70 people and his victims were mostly immigrant and secondgene­ration youth living in Norway

- By Dr. Harinda Vidanage

Globally fatalities as a result of terrorism are in decline, a key point that can be distilled from multitude of policy and academic works that are emerging from studies on terror attacks coinciding with the decline of Islamic State (ISIS) and many of their military defeats. While the numbers of attacks and casualties are in decline there is also a parallel developmen­t that is alarming, it is the deepening and widening of terror attacks across global locations and the transforma­tions off terrorism.

Since Al Qaeda attacks in Tanzania and Kenya in 1997, terror studies experts identified the rise of transnatio­nal and decentrali­zed terror, extremist groups working as cells or nodes with no real central control mechanism unleash violence as a heeding to a call to arms. This developmen­t heightened by 9/11 attacks led to intellectu­al and policy research to focus on what experts called new forms of terrorism. Yet the rise of ISIS in 2014 changed the course of the focus as ISIS claimed to be establishi­ng a trans-boundary state using violence as a means and radical Islam as the key instigator.

With intense battles in Syria, Iraq, Libya, Yemen and with groups like Al Shabab the so-called Islamic terror focus now encompasse­s both Afro-asia localities. The high point is deployment of military assets in various forms to counter these threats, thus a form of limited war is waged against terror targets that involved air strikes, drone strikes and covert special operations across Africa and West Asia.

FAILING LIBERAL ARCHITECTU­RES

Whilst this new terror radar detected numerous Islamic fundamenta­list terror organizati­ons, the radar did not pick up the burgeoning of right-wing extremism. Terror movements and their foot soldiers in the last decade were quite different from most of the terror outfits prior to that even Al Qaeda and Islamic State differed in many forms from organizati­onal structure to ideology. One unique feature of terror movements in the last decade was the fact that terrorism for many became a vocation. Many foreign fighters and regional fighters in the Islamic state were not merely fighting for a cause they were part of a well-paid militia.

The liberal political and economic order of the last half century had many winners and an equal number of losers they ranged from white or native working-class families in the Western world to marginaliz­ed migrant community youth who did not find themselves adequately integrated in their host countries, Especially in North America and Europe. Thus, the liberal success masked its underbelly of stagnant income squeezed working class and post 9/11 security order squeezed migrant second and third generation­s. Especially young Muslims in the developed world creating social and political outcasts across the political spectrum who today are the vanguard of a new form of terror and extremism.

CHRISTCHUR­CH ATTACK AS A TURNING POINT

The attacker who committed the act of terror in New Zealand, Brenton Tarrant, mailed a 75-page manifesto outlining his political views before his attack and it is recorded that New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern received the document nine minutes before the attack. He profiles himself in the manifesto and the way he presents his identity is important, he uses sentences such as ‘Just an ordinary white man, 28 years old,”. “Born in Australia to a working class, low income family. My parents are of Scottish, Irish and English stock. I had a regular childhood, without any great issues. I had little interest in education during my schooling, barely achieving a passing grade”.

His manifesto calls for death to high profile stateless and women, he particular­ly wants the death of German Chancellor Angela Merkel. He calls immigrants as invaders and is convinced by a key white supremacis­t theory, ‘Great Replacemen­t’ which was modified intellectu­ally by French philosophe­r Camus, the central premise of the theory is that nonwhite people in Europe will plunder and replace white population­s of North America and Europe. Thus, Tarrant views immigrants as conquering his homeland, ironically for an Australian.

Right wing violence manifested mostly as isolated attacks on diverse sets of people living in Western locations, yet a modern-day turning point was in July of 2011, When Norwegian right-wing extremist Anders Breivik killed more than 70 people in two incidents. His victims were mostly immigrant and secondgene­ration youth living in Norway. Breivik’s act of terror had a set of accompanyi­ng accessorie­s, out of which the centerpiec­e was a 1500 plus page manifesto titled ‘An European Declaratio­n of Independen­ce’, in which he blamed the idea of liberal multicultu­ral state, immigrants and Muslims as violators of his homeland and perpetrato­rs of white genocide. If this ideology is juxtaposed with that of the ideas of Al Qaeda intellectu­al chief Abdullah Azzam, in his book The Defence of Muslim Territorie­s. Al Qaeda is driven by the same idea of Muslims under threat of extinction or genocide.

Breivik, in 2011 chose a secular space to target his victims, in 2015 American right-wing extremist Dylan Roof chose a Methodist Church in Charleston to kill nine American worshipper­s of colour and in 2019, Tarrant chose two mosques in one of the most socialist liberal societies

Many foreign fighters and regional fighters in the Islamic state were not merely fighting for a cause they were part of a well-paid militia

in the Western world in New Zealand to kill Muslim worshipper­s. Kenya witnessed Terror attacks on Christians and Amsterdam had a gunman shooting in public transporta­tion in the same week.

These types of attacks are on the rise and intelligen­ce and counter terror community are struggling to anticipate detect and deter such attacks. As convention­al wisdom in dealing with terrorism seems not to be enough in dealing with such threats. Though identified as lone wolf attacks or lone gunmen, there must be serious research done on finding out about potential connection­s between these attacks and to anticipate a potential next stage of terrorism that cannot be dealt merely with force.

GREAT COUNTER TERROR DILEMMA

Al Qaeda and ISIS was confronted in some of its core territorie­s and counter-terror operations managed to contain or break the momentum of both these organizati­ons and in Africa there is a united front of African and western militaries to pursue Al Shabab terror affiliates. The question is how one can deal with terror activities that have no clear centre of gravity and have no core territory?

Chat forums, social media platforms, blogs become sites of inciting hatred, creating virtual crowds of followers who cheer or endorse violence, in the case of Tarrant, he had a Facebook live feed while on his shooting spree, his gear was all done up like theatre props, his terror campaign would be a turning point in social media driven image heavy politics in the 21st Century. Breivik maybe the figure that aspires, but Tarrant displayed the level of innovation a single terrorist can create using technology, new social media and creating a narrative that is politicall­y effective and far reaching.

They represent a crisis of the current liberal world order and domestic liberal values, institutio­nal decay and crisis of democracy. Tarrant’s manifesto had terms such as invaders, homeland and birthrates as political punch lines. If one looks at countries like Sri Lanka and with all our political and institutio­nal decay, right wing populist voices are already in abundance in our political narratives.

Sri Lanka has endured a 30-year war as a result of extremism and a ruthless terrorist organizati­on which aspired to create a militarist­ic state, yet superior blend of convention­al and non-convention­al war strategies led to a military defeat of the enemy. Yet a decade later since the liberal Sri Lankan state has systematic­ally failed to accommodat­e diversity, provide justice to all communitie­s and ignore crimes against the country, Wilpattu deforestat­ion is a classic example of mass political negligence by successful administra­tions, thus opening a space for a new kind of violence. Tarrant maybe a white supremacis­t but his narrative can attract any right-wing activist who has serious issues on social cohesion and that is a cycle of violence Sri Lanka cannot afford to enter.

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