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TERROR WARS
Foreign fighters switching tactics to reach Syria, Iraq
By Carole LANDRY
United Nations, United States (AFP) May 29, 2015


12 Australian women have tried to join IS: police
Melbourne (AFP) May 29, 2015 - At least 12 Australian women from one city have attempted to join the Islamic State group, police said Friday, warning of a trend towards a "romanticised view" of violent jihadists.

More than 100 Australians have left the country to support IS in Syria and Iraq, raising concerns about radicalisation and whether they pose a security threat on return, the authorities have said. At least 30 have been killed overseas.

Victoria Police assistant commissioner Tracy Linford said those attracted to IS were mostly young, isolated people swayed by slick social media propaganda.

In the case of women, they often had a romantic idea of what life would be like under Islamic State control, she said, adding that at least 12 had attempted to join from Melbourne, Victoria's capital city.

"We've got five (women) that we know are over there," Linford said, adding that two more were unaccounted for, four were turned back outside Australia and one was stopped at the airport before leaving.

"But we also suspect that there are probably more than 12," she told reporters.

Linford's comments came just days after a Sydney mother reportedly abandoned her two children and fled to Syria for a new life under Islamic State.

"We think that the young women particularly get a romanticised view of what actually exists for them if they travel to the conflict zones," she said.

"There is a reach-back from people who are already in the conflict zone telling them, 'Come over... you will be well looked after, you will have an important position in growing the caliphate, bearing jihadi children in the future, growing the Islamic State'.

"And I think they think they are going to be put on a pedestal and treated very well once they are overseas, but the reality is, that's not the case."

Linford said some women were forced into arranged marriages and others pushed into sexual servitude, while living in often squalid conditions and on rations, with their movements heavily restricted.

"One of things we know about ISIS is that their social media skills are well advanced, and their reach through social media is obviously paying dividends for them," she said, using another acronym for the jihadists.

Earlier this week Prime Minister Tony Abbott said dual nationals linked to terrorism would be stripped of their Australian citizenship.

Australia raised its threat level to high last September and has since carried out a series of counter-terrorism raids, with several alleged plots foiled this year.

Foreign fighters bent on joining jihadists in Syria, Iraq and North Africa are changing tactics to avoid detection, increasingly resorting to tortuous travel routes and relying on middlemen, Interpol said Friday.

Interpol chief Juergen Stock told a special UN Security Council meeting that intelligence-sharing was key to stopping would-be jihadists who are now flocking to war zones in record numbers.

"Intelligence is crossing borders but at a much slower pace than foreign terrorist fighters are," said Stock.

The 15-member council was meeting interior ministers for the first time after a UN study showed a surge in the number of foreign terrorist fighters (FTFs) worldwide.

The council adopted a ground-breaking resolution in September that called on governments to make it a serious crime for their nationals to enlist as a foreign fighter with extremist groups such as Islamic State.

Stock said measures to stop foreign fighters are "already producing changes in tactics" by recruiters who are setting up "broken travel" to make tracking more difficult.

More "facilitation networks" are springing up to help would-be jihadists reach their destination and recruiters are approaching convicted criminals to join their ranks, he said.

"Other patterns include a growing share of recruits with criminal records, especially from Europe, and the active role played domestically by some suspects who have been prevented from traveling abroad," Stock said.

- 'More needs to be done' -

US Homeland Security Secretary Jeh Johnson told the council that "much more needs to be done" to cut off the steady flow of foreign fighters who are becoming "increasingly mobile, adaptable and brutal."

Only 51 countries have asked airlines operating in their territories to provide advance passenger information to allow security personnel to carry out checks.

A study by a UN panel of experts showed a 71 percent increase in the number of foreign fighters between mid-2014 to March 2015.

Around 25,000 foreign fighters from over 100 countries are involved in armed conflicts worldwide, with the highest influx into Syria, Iraq and increasingly into Libya, the report said.

Large numbers are traveling from Tunisia, Morocco, France and Russia, and there are new trails of jihadists leaving the Maldives, Finland, Trinidad and Tobago, as well as from some sub-Saharan Africa countries.

"We're not seeing nearly enough global action to criminalize and actually prevent the movement of FTFs to and from conflict zones," US Ambassador Samantha Power said ahead of the meeting.

"We need countries to step up by creating new laws if they haven't, enforce laws on the books where they have them, and take concrete steps to make it possible to stop FTF travel."

Turkey, seen as the main transit point for foreign fighters headed to Syria, has been under pressure to take action, but the focus is shifting to the countries of origin.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon told the council that most foreign fighters are young men, aged between 15 and 35, and stressed the need to address the factors leading women and girls to join the ranks of extremist groups.


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TERROR WARS
Canada federal police raid would-be jihadists' homes
Ottawa (AFP) May 26, 2015
Canadian federal police on Tuesday raided homes in the Montreal area of would-be jihadists who had been detained for allegedly seeking to join a militant group. Searches linked to 10 suspects were conducted around the city, Royal Canadian Mounted Police Constable Erique Gasse told AFP. He declined to offer details of the RCMP's "ongoing investigation." But local television showed off ... read more


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