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Female jihadis give Isis new avenues for attacks

The movement of women wanting to wage violent jihad, just like men, is picking up momentum in France. But this is a not a new phenomenon, says Jack Moore

Jack Moore
Tuesday 08 November 2016 19:02 GMT
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Police officers and rescue workers stand near a van that ploughed into a crowd leaving a fireworks display in the French Riviera town of Nice
Police officers and rescue workers stand near a van that ploughed into a crowd leaving a fireworks display in the French Riviera town of Nice (Getty)

It was early on a Sunday morning in September when French police discovered a Peugeot parked near the Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris with its hazard lights flashing and its license plates removed. The car carried seven gas cylinders, six of them full, and three cans of diesel. The perpetrators had perhaps intended to blow it up with a lit cigarette and a fuel-soaked blanket, but the vehicle failed to detonate.

Three weeks after that failed plot, police arrested two teenage suspects accused of planning a violent attack in Nice, the details of which haven’t been made public.

At the center of both plots: women allegedly inspired or directed by Isis. All had been in contact with a prominent French recruiter for Isis, Rachid Kassim, who is believed to be in Syria. Roughly a year after the Isis attacks in Paris that killed 130, France remains in a state of emergency, thanks in part to later assaults inspired by the militant group in Nice and the northern town of Rouen.

A number of people were killed and others injured in a series of gun attacks across Paris, as well as explosions outside the national stadium where France was hosting Germany (Getty)

Now, however, a new threat is emerging: women who want to wage violent jihad just like men. As Isis continues to lose territory in its self-declared caliphate, French security services are anticipating the return of hundreds of foreign fighters. But while authorities have long scrutinized male Isisoperatives, French female jihadis (some of whom have traveled to Iraq and Syria of their own accord) are providing the group with greater, more covert potential for violence – worrying Western security officials, who are already overstretched.

It’s not clear to what extent senior Isis leadership is driving this strategy, especially since the group does not recognise women as equal participants in war. While Isis refers to its male jihadi attackers as “soldiers” or “fighters, ” so far the group has claimed only one woman as its soldier: Tashfeen Malik, who led an attack in December 2015 in San Bernardino, California; other women who have killed in the group’s name are referred to merely as “supporters. ”

Tashfeen Malik (Getty)

Yet radicalised women in France are increasingly willing to give their lives for the cause, says Matthieu Suc, author of Femmes de Djihadistes – or Wives of Jihadis. “In different jihadist records, you can see, you can hear, women – often young – regretting not to be able to commit terrorist attacks, ” he says. “Theoretically, women want – just like men – to take part in the jihad. That’s the way it goes. That’s the order of things. ”

The threat seems to be growing. Already, 24 women and three girls under the age of 18 are in custody in France for alleged extremism offenses, according to the Paris prosecutor’s office. Some 40 per cent of French recruits who have joined Isis in Syria are female, according to the French Interior Ministry, and French authorities said at least 220 women had made the journey to Iraq and Syria to join Isis as of December 2015.

In early September, Paris prosecutor François Molins estimated that as Isis continues to lose territory to Kurdish and Iraqi forces, “hundreds” of these radicalised women would return to France in the next few months. Officials have said they underestimated the threat of female militants in Europe, particularly since returnees are not necessarily just “jihadi brides” who stayed at home while their husbands were on the front lines. Instead, they have long been immersed in the internal workings of a deadly extremist group. Malik set the precedent for female Isis attackers in the West when she and her husband shot and killed 14 people in San Bernardino.

Although Isis did not direct the couple, the group inspired them and later praised their actions in its English-language magazine. Now, female Isis attackers are picking up momentum. In September, three women launched an Isis-inspired knife and firebomb attack on a police station in the eastern Kenyan city of Mombasa before police shot them dead and, earlier in October, Moroccan authorities dismantled a suspected Isis cell of 10 women accused of plotting attacks in the North African kingdom. But women have been carrying out attacks long before Isis existed. In the early 2000s, Chechnya’s “Black Widows” – Islamist female suicide bombers – targeted civilians as part of their drive for an independent state.

Sajida Mubarek Atrous al-Rishawi (Getty)

Around the same time, women conducted suicide bombings during the second Palestinian intifada against Israel. In 2005, Sajida al-Rishawi attempted an attack on a wedding in the Jordanian capital of Amman. And more recently, Nigerian militant group Boko Haram – now an Isis affiliate – has directed dozens of women to target mosques, civilian camps and Nigerian authorities in suicide bombings. Earlier incarnations of Isis had also approved of women’s roles in attacks if men encountered difficulties, says Cole Bunzel, a PhD candidate at Princeton University.

Iraqi Sajida Mubarek Atrous al-Rishawi wearing an explosives belt while confessing to her failed attempt to blow herself up inside one of the three Amman hotels (Getty)

Isis’s former leader Abu Umar al-Baghdadi said in 2007 that women could fight “in special circumstances where [the targets] are difficult for men.” A year later, the Islamic State in Iraq’s minister of war, Abu Hamza al-Muhajir, said women could commit suicide attacks “in circumstances where men cannot.”

Now Europe’s crackdown on jihadi networks has provided Isis with a similar justification, since intelligence agencies are likely to pay closer attention to male extremists. Women often connect people, passing along key information while remaining undetected, says Nikita Malik, a researcher at the UK-based anti-extremism think tank Quilliam. That makes them crucial players in the formation of militant networks and in the deadly attacks these groups carry out.

One of France’s most influential Isis recruiters has praised female participation in violent, domestic jihad, and is now directing women to carry out attacks. A 29-year-old amateur rapper from Roanne in central France, Kassim communicated with the Notre Dame suspects through the encrypted messaging app Telegram, a source in the Paris prosecutor’s office tells Newsweek. (A source close to the investigation told Agence-France Presse that Kassim was in contact with the Nice suspects too.)

Kassim has shamed men on Telegram for not taking part in similar assaults. “Where are our brothers? ” he wrote. “You have to understand that if these women went into action, it’s because so few men are doing anything. Why are you waiting so long to the point the women are overtaking you in terms of honor? ”

Even without official endorsement at the highest levels of Isis leadership, European security officials worry this new trend has the potential to spread beyond France. And French security services, which have failed seven times in less than two years, are already dealing with a complex web of threats. If radicalised women are now as dangerous as radicalised men, they may soon succeed where the Notre Dame attackers failed.

© Newsweek

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