In the last year,
female jihadis have dominated the news. Sally Jones, British, a punk rocker who
converted to radical Islam, has risen in the US 'kill list'. The Pentagon wants
to eliminate this 48 year mother of
two. Her husband, Junaid Hussain was killed in a drone strike in
2015. Extrajudicial killings are abhorrent and we should be wary of US/UK
propagandists. However, Jones has called on Muslims to create havoc in European
countries by terrorising people. She has been known to use her children as
human shields. Her husband filmed himself torturing and beheading people. Such
people find their God through blood sacrifices.
At the end of
April, three teenage girls were arrested in London,
suspected of actively planning a terror attack. In Willesden, a 21-year-old
women was shot when anti-terror police raided a house. Six
other people were arrested, and we will know more after they are
tried.
In autumn 2016,
French police foiled a planned attack on Notre Dam Cathedral
and other public sites. They arrested Ornella G whose finger prints were found
in a car carrying gas cylinders and other dangerous substances. She was part of
a female 'terrorist commando' and has been charged with association with a
terrorist group and attempted murder by an organised group. The others
allegedly involved were Ines Madani who tried to stab arresting officers and
Sarah H who did knife a plain-clothes officer. She was apparently engaged to
two men who have murdered in the name of Allah. A 38 year old mother and her
young teenage daughter are also suspected of being involved.
In 2015, three
school girls from Bethnal Green, Shamima Begum, 15, Kadiza Sultana, 16, and
Amira Aabse, 15 went off to Syria to become 'jihadi brides'. They took
epilators, pretty knickers and body lotions. Aqsa Mahmood, educated in private
school and a university student, born and raised in Glasgow, had become an Isis
bride herself. She was the suspected groomer who used social media to lure the
East End girls. One is now presumed dead.
Islamicism
absolutely control and brutally abuse females. And yet they still flock over,
as if they are craving punishment. Or enslavement. A new book on Bin Laden by
Catherine Scott-Clark and Adrian Levy describes the lives of his four wives.
One, Khairiah, was a child psychologist. He rendered them invisible, made them
have many babies, and married off his young teen daughters. They did not
protest. Only the eldest, Najwa, mother of eleven children, finally left him.
Taking the long
view, there were also female guerrilla fighters – in Cuba, Vietnam, Sri Lanka
and other conflict zones. The unending Palestinian struggle has produced female
fighters. Leila Khaled, for example, a member of the Popular Front for the
Liberation of Palestine, hijacked four planes in the stormy late sixties. In
her last attempt in 1970, the plane was forced to land in Heathrow. Khaled was
holding two hand grenades. She was held in Ealing police station, five minutes
away from where I live. They sent her back. Khaled is still alive and involved
in the struggle for a Palestinian state. Haganah was the Zionist militant armed
organisation active in the British Mandate of Palestine until the late early
forties. Twenty percent of their fighters were women.
Such
females were driven – rightly or wrongly – by burning political passions. They
followed some rules of war. They were not totally indoctrinated.
Female jihadis are
a 21st-century phenomenon. 17% of Westerners in Isis-held
territories are now female. I am asked over and over again, 'Why do they do
it?' Sigh. I don't know. It is a consuming mystery, a whyshedunnit.
We
can only speculate. According to researchers the University of Miami, women are
the 'glue, holding the organisation together'. Many recruits are groomed.
However, intelligent, educated Muslim females are also joining the cult.
Professor Beverley Milton-Edwards, visiting fellow at the Brookings Doha
Centre, says some passively follow instructions, but many experience 'insurgent
urgings', make independent choices believing the caliphate empowers them to
live as true Muslims.
I
have met strident, purist Muslim women (again a new breed) who justify violent
jihadism. They hate non-Muslims, Muslims like me, liberal, democratic,
questioning and free. And then there is sex, natural desires tied down by fear,
guilt, shame. Shazia Mirza, the Muslim comedienne, says young Muslim females in
conservative families are seduced by 'hairy, fit, gun toting, macho' Isis
blokes they see on the internet. She is not joking.
Finally,
geopolitics comes into play. Millions of Muslims are ashamed of their failed
home states. They long for Islam's glory eras. They hate being hated migrants.
They also, understandably, hate the West's power games. Women who feel this
failure, now think it is their duty to save their faith. Religious intensity
mixed with frustration is a hallucinatory brew.
The
really bad news is that violent female Islamism is only just getting started.
And we have a US president who thinks a shoot to kill policy will sort it. It
won't. The age of terror will not end any time soon.
No comments:
Post a Comment