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Thread: Europe Fears Threat from Converts to Islam

  1. #1
    abu afak
    Guest

    Europe Fears Threat from Converts to Islam

    Europe fears threat from its converts to Islam

    by Craig S. Smith NYT


    ST.-PIERRE-EN-FAUCIGNY, France. The Courtailler brothers grew up in this medieval Alpine town, children of a butcher who went broke, divorced his wife and moved to a job in a meatpacking plant far away. Two of the three brothers, David and Jérôme, educated in Catholic schools, foundered in drugs until they found religion: Islam.
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    Within five years of David's initial conversion at a mosque in the British seaside resort of Brighton in 1996, the brothers embraced many of the leading lights of Europe's Islamic terror network. David, 28, is now in jail, and in late June, Jérôme, 29, turned himself in to the police in the Netherlands, days after he was convicted by a court there of belonging to an international terrorist group.
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    The Courtaillers are part of a growing group of people who found a home in Islam and then veered into extremism, raising concerns among antiterrorism officials on both sides of the Atlantic that the new recruits could provide foreign-born Islamic militants with invisibility and cover, by escaping the scrutiny often reserved for young men of Arab descent.
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    A handful of Westerners have already been arrested on terrorism charges. Their experiences, the authorities fear, could foreshadow a deepening problem.
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    "Converts will be used for striking more and more by jihadist circles," said Jean-Luc Marret, a terrorism expert at the Strategic Research Foundation, in Paris. "They have been used in the past for proselytism, logistics or support, and they are operationally useful now."
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    Islam is Europe's fastest-growing religion, and while there are no reliable statistics, many experts say they believe that the number of converts has grown since Sept. 11, 2001, in many ways because of the campaign against terrorism.
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    Antoine Sfeir, a French scholar who is writing a book on the trend, said a small number of converts, many of them disaffected and often troubled young people, saw the current wave of Islamic terrorism as "a kind of combat against the rich, powerful, by the poor men of the planet."
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    Only a small fraction of Western Islamic converts sympathize with terrorism, and even fewer become engaged in terrorist activity. A few dozen militant converts have been identified so far. A report by France's domestic intelligence agency, published by Le Figaro, estimated last year that there were 30,000 to 50,000 converts in France.
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    However small the number of them drawn to terrorism, the police are focusing on this subset as a serious and growing threat.
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    "The conversion to Islam of fragile individuals undoubtedly leads to the risk of diversion to terrorism," the intelligence agency's report said, adding that radical groups have recruited converts because they could cross borders easily or serve as front men for renting accommodations or providing other logistical support.
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    The trend is not only happening in Europe.
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    Jack Roche, a British-born Australian taxi driver, converted to Islam, trained in Afghanistan and returned to Australia, where he was recently sentenced to nine years in prison for trying to blow up the Israeli Embassy in Canberra.
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    In the United States, Jose Padilla, held by the government on suspicion of plotting terrorist attacks, converted to Islam in 1992 while in a Florida jail.
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    Both David and Jérôme Courtailler, the French brothers, moved freely through Europe without attracting scrutiny, which the authorities often reserve for young men of Arab descent.
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    In an interview, one French antiterrorism official said many recent converts were women, further complicating the standard profile.
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    Militant converts come to Islam in several ways, most notably through contact with militant Muslims while serving time in Europe's prisons, where the Islamic population has skyrocketed. Richard Reid, the so-called shoe bomber from Britain, converted to Islam in prison.
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    France's prison population is more than 50 percent Muslim.
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    Another door to Islam is the Tablighi Jamaat, a missionary group that started in India 75 years ago to promote Islam in the face of Hindu domination. It is the world's largest network of Islamic proselytizers.
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    The Tablighi Jamaat send converts to study in countries like Saudi Arabia or Pakistan, where they often meet militant radicals. Several well-known Western converts are Tablighi Jamaat alumni, including John Walker Lindh, the American caught fighting with the Taliban in Afghanistan in 2002.
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    Other people convert because of family influence - particularly in France, where intermarriage between Christians and Muslims is increasingly common - or simple peer pressure in predominantly Muslim neighborhoods.
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    Al Qaeda's recruitment efforts have redoubled since the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan, the authorities say. Seasoned Qaeda members have begun recruiting a new generation of militants through European mosques and from among local militant Islamic groups, the police say.
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    Jérôme Courtailler was among that group. He was arrested in 2001 in connection with a plot to blow up the U.S. Embassy in Paris, a plot begun before the Sept. 11 attacks but scheduled to be carried out after it.
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    Jérôme Courtailler converted to Islam in Leicester, England, under the influence of Djamel Beghal, an Algerian-born Frenchman and confessed Qaeda member, in 1999. Beghal is believed to have been the ringleader of the U.S. Embassy bombing plan.
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    The road from convert to jihadist can be remarkably short, terrorism experts say, because someone new to Islam does not have the cultural bearings or religious grounding to resist radical interpretations of Islam, and many come with a romanticized notion of an Islamic conflict with the West...."

    http://www.iht.com/articles/530018.html
    Last edited by abu afak; 07-21-2004 at 01:51 AM.

  2. #2
    Hisardut
    Guest
    jail cells and nut houses are great recruitment location...

  3. #3
    David_in_NYC
    Guest
    Europe has two bigger threats to worry about... #1 their total, stark cowardice, and the invitation to violence that extends to jihadis; and #2 the US getting so sick of their whining that dropping a nuke on Paris looks attractive.

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