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Showing posts with label radicalisation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radicalisation. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 20, 2017

Major Terrorist Attack in Australia ‘Inevitable’, says Counter-Terrorism Chief

The New Normal - Aussie style
Learning to live with fear and accepting the inevitability of a radical Muslim massacre

FILE PHOTO © Edgar Su / Reuters

One of Australia’s top counter-terrorism officials has joined the ranks of people advising citizens to learn to live under a threat of terrorism, saying that a major attack on Aussie soil is inevitable.

“I don’t like to say it but it will happen,” Mark Murdoch told the media on Wednesday. The 37-year-old veteran, who serves as assistant commissioner for counter-terrorism in New South Wales, opined that “It’s inevitable”.

“Despite everything that is being done and the good work that law enforcement and intelligence is doing, without wanting to create unnecessary fear within the community, it’s going to happen,” he added.

Murdoch, who is scheduled to retire in November, said security agencies are unable to stop radicalization through social media, and they are hard-pressed to identify potential lone wolf attacks by individuals and small groups. Such attackers only need easily-available tools to stage attacks, “and then all of a sudden we get something like a meat grinder.”

“What that tells us is that while we are pointed in a particular direction by intelligence sources, we need to maintain an open mind because in this business anything can happen at any time.” the official said.

Last month Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull laid out his plan to reduce the risk of terrorist attacks in the country. Among other things, it includes placing barriers in public places to prevent vehicular attacks similar to those in Nice and Barcelona.



Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Number of Islamist Radicals in France Doubles in 2015 Rising to Over 8,000

French police © Charles Platiau / Reuters
The number of Islamic radicals in France doubled last year reaching 8,250 people, according to figures leaked to local media. The main hotspots of radicalization are big cities including Paris and Lyon.

Around 70 percent of the suspected radicals were male and 80 percent of the cases were characterized as “serious,” according to an official report leaked to Le Figaro and published on Tuesday.

The figures are based on police data as well as on information gathered by a special anti-radicalization hotline, the paper said. Most of the cases were identified as a result of “human contact,” not online communication.

Le Figaro published a map of the French regions where more than 200 people turned to radical Islam in 2015. Such areas include Paris and its suburbs as well as other big cities such as Lyon, Toulouse and Lille.

The report adds that the number of radicalized women and youth has significantly risen.

It says that nearly 5,000 websites – including Twitter and Facebook social network accounts – were blocked last year because of their connections to extremist Islamism.

The report said that French authorities prevented 275 suspected radicals from leaving France in 2015. While 78 were deterred from entering the country illegally.

The French government focused on the problem of radicalization last year after terror attacks such as the Charlie Hebdo and kosher market shootings in January and the terror assaults in Paris in November that killed 130 people.

Following the latter a state of emergency was introduced in France. On Wednesday, the French cabinet tabled a draft law to extend the state of emergency for another three months, according to the government’s spokesman Stephane Le Foll.

Last month France announced a €425 million (over $470 million) plan which implies the creation of 2,800 extra jobs to monitor 3,000 potentially dangerous individuals.


The state of emergency was introduced after the November attacks.

“Terrorism has struck our soil in an unprecedented way… and the threat of terrorism remains high, French citizens deserve to know the truth,” Prime Minister Manuel Valls told a press conference at the Elysee.

“We must act and act quickly, it is everyone’s responsibility, but foremost the government’s responsibility," he added.

Saturday, September 5, 2015

Austria's Muslims Fear Changes to Historic Islam Law

Other Austrians fear no change to Islam Law

The Islam Law was introduced by Habsburg Emperor Franz Joseph in 1912
By Bethany Bell
BBC News, Vienna
A minaret is pictured against mountains in the Tyrolean village of Telfs
 in western Austria (Reuters)
A row has broken out in Austria over government plans to overhaul the country's century-old law on Islam.

The new draft, which is partly aimed at tackling Islamist radicalism, forbids any foreign funding. But Austria's official Islamic Community says it reflects a widespread mistrust of Muslims and fails to treat them equally.

Islam has been an official religion in Austria since 1912. The Islam law, the "Islamgesetz", was brought in by the Habsburg Emperor Franz Joseph, after Austria's annexation of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Under the law, Muslims, like Catholics, Jews and Protestants, are guaranteed wide-ranging rights, including religious education in state schools.

Controversy

Carla Amina Baghajati from the Islamic Community says the old law has served as "a kind of a model in Europe" and done much to integrate and anchor Muslims into Austrian society.

It shows how recognition of Islam makes Muslims feel accepted, she says. "Their loyalty towards the state comes automatically."

Roughly half a million Muslims live in Austria today, around 6% of the population. Many of them have Turkish or Bosnian roots.

6% is a very large Muslim population proportionately, compared to many European countries. They are, however, mostly 'westernized' and no problem to Austria. The concern is, at 6%, there is potential for all sorts of problems should radicalization become more prominent, or, as we see in England, the younger generation becomes more 'fundamentalist' than their parents.

A meeting inside Vienna's main mosque for its open day
The Islamic Community says the draft law could play into the hands of radicals

After more than 100 years, most agree that the Islam law needs to be updated to reflect the realities of modern Austria.

But some parts of the government's draft legislation have caused controversy, in particular a proposed ban on any foreign funding for mosques or imams.

The Islamic Community says that does not fit with the principle of equality.

But Austria's Minister for Foreign Affairs and Integration Sebastian Kurz told Austrian Radio (ORF) that the ban was a necessary step.

"With other religions, there is not the challenge that we have to fear influences from abroad and therefore have to be stricter with financing," he said.

"We want an Austrian form of Islam. Every Muslim in Austria should be able to practise his religion properly, but we don't want influence and control from abroad."

'Too foreign'

Relations between Muslims and Austria's Catholic majority have been relatively calm, compared with many other European countries. But there are tensions.

Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz (Reuters)
Austrian Foreign Minister Sebastian Kurz draws a distinction between the financing of Islam and other religions.

The far-right Freedom Party, which has seen a surge of support, has taken to warning against what it calls "Islamisation".

At a Freedom Party Oktoberfest, Vienna district councillor Helwig Leibinger said many Muslims in Vienna were too foreign.

"They cannot be integrated very well, because the women wear the burka or something like that and they don't want to be real Austrians. They try to be Turkish."

Interpol appeal for Sabina Selimovic and Samra Kesinovic
The two Austrian girls have been dubbed "poster girls for jihad"
In recent months, public concern has also been growing over reports of Muslims from Austria joining jihadist groups in Iraq and Syria, including two teenage girls from Vienna.

Fifteen-year-old Sabina Selimovic and Samra Kesinovic, 17, born to Bosnian refugees in Austria, went missing in April. In a recent interview with Paris Match by text message, Sabina said that she and Samra had married Islamic State fighters in Syria.

They have been dubbed "poster girls for jihad" in the Austrian media.

The Austrian government said in August that Islamist militancy was on the rise. Officials have said around 150 people, including 44 Austrian citizens, have left to join groups such as Islamic State.

Radicalisation is certainly a problem, says Gudrun Harrer of Der Standard newspaper, but not a topic for the Islam law. "We should keep these discussions separate," she says.

"It seems that Austria has a relatively bigger problem with radicalism [than others] when compared to the size of the population.

She sees the influx of refugees from Chechnya in recent years as being part of the issue, rather than Austria's historical Islamic communities.

"You don't come from well-taught Islam to radicalism. You generally come from nothing to radicalism," she says.

Women standing on a stage at the Freedom Party Oktoberfest
The far-right Freedom Party is against what it calls "Islamisation"
'Clearly excessive'

The draft law has also been criticised by constitutional experts, who say that some of its provisions fail to treat Muslims equally.

Professor Stefan Hammer from the University of Vienna says, while it is legitimate for the government to try and prevent misuse of donations from abroad, a blanket ban on foreign funding for the Islamic Community is constitutionally very problematic.

"Financing of religious communities is part of their internal affairs. This does not mean the state may not address any aspect of that, but it has to be proportional," he says.

Other religious groups and churches receive external funding, notably the Russian Orthodox Church from Moscow, so differentiating between religions would clearly be excessive, he believes.

"It would be a clear breach of the principle of equal treatment."

Carla Amina Baghajati from the Islamic Community says the draft is infused with "a spirit of mistrust", which she fears could play into the hands of the radicals.

Can't imagine where a 'spirit of mistrust' would come from. 

"The radicals make use of the identity question, telling people: 'Look at the European societies, you won't ever be on the same level, you will always be an outsider. They won't accept you, so come and join us.'

"This is very dangerous. We have to help young people to find their identity and the law is one of the important pieces in this identity building. It has helped in the past and we want it to help in the future."

Problem is, in the past you didn't have Imams preaching jihad. You didn't have web sites and Twitter users promoting ISIS. You didn't have Muslims who don't want to adapt to Austrian society. The situation is different; it calls for extraordinary and creative responses, if only temporarily.

The draft law is currently being examined and considered in detail. It could be put to a vote in Austria's parliament this month.

Omar Al-Rawi from the Islamic Community says that if the controversial parts of the law are not changed, they will consider taking the fight to Austria's Constitutional Court.