Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 19 – Dushanbe says
that most of its citizens who are joining ISIS were recruited while working as
gastarbeiters in Russia. Moscow denies this and points to domestic problems in
Tajikistan. But neither the Tajik government nor the Russian one has an answer
to the problem of how to respond to such people when they return home.
Moscow has come up with a partial answer:
it is banning many Central Asians from returning to Russia as gastarbeiters.
Yesterday, Dushanbe said that the Russian authorities have put 333,931 Tajiks
on a list of those who will not be admitted to Russia in the future (news.tj/ru/news/svyshe-333-tys-grazhdanam-tadzhikistana-doroga-v-rossiyu-zakazana).
That may help Russia in the short
term, but it makes the situation in Tajikistan even worse. Not only does this
ensure that transfer payments on which Tajiks had been relying will not be
reappearing anytime soon, but it likely increases recruiting opportunities for
ISIS whose representatives will say if
you’re going to be treated like us, you should be with us.
The role of Russian-based
institutions in recruiting Tajiks is beyond question. Even Russian officials
have admitted this, although they have tended to downplay that factor and also
to accept official Dushanbe figures about how many Tajiks have gone to fight
with ISIS forces in Syria.
Dushanbe usually gives the figure of
700, of whom, it says, approximately 300 have already died, meaning that it
faces the problem of the return of only about 400. But others working on the question, Zinaida
Burskaya of “Novaya gazeta” says put the figure at far more – perhaps 2500 to
3000, one equivalent to the number of ISIS fighters from the Russian Federation
(novayagazeta.ru/society/71476.html).
Even more worrisome are the figures
she cites from Khudoberdi Kholiknazarov, the head of the Tajikistan
Presidential Center for Strategic Research.
He says that “only 20 percent of Tajiks go [into ISIS] directly from
Tajikistan. 80 percent of them do so via Russia. They are recruited there,”
often at the Moscow mosque on Prospekt Mir.
Khoknazarov concedes that the source
of some of this problem lies within the borders of Tajikistan, including in the
large number of illegal mosques and medrassahs opened over the last 15 years,
often, he says, by the Party of the Islamic Rebirth of Tajikistan. And that is
something Dushanbe is now addressing.
In 2010-2011, he says, the
authorities closed down more than 70 medrassahs, and during the first six
months of 2015, they shuttered “several hundred mosques.” Moreover, the authorities have banned many
Islamist traditions and now insist on approving the sermons delivered at the official
mosques lest the wrong messages be sent.
The authorities say that these
actions are required by the need to struggle against terrorism, extremism and
religious radicalism,” the “Novaya gazeta” journalist says. But “in truth, in
practice, [such moves] often have exactly the opposite result,” driving people
into underground mosques the authorities do not control.
The Tajik government, Kholiknazarov
says, recognizes that part of the problem is that ISIS finds it easy to recruit
among Muslims who know little or nothing about their faith and thus are willing
to defer to those who appear to know more.
Consequently, it is moving to reopen some of the Muslim training
academies to prepare more mullahs.
In Dushanbe now, there is an Islamic
Institute and an Islamic gymnasium, and the 23 of the 26 medrassahs not working
this year – apparently because they were shut down at government order – will resume
their operations in the next academic year.
Until there are enough schools at
home, Koliknazarov says, the country will have to rely on mullahs trained
abroad. He himself was trained in Pakistan. “The state doesn’t see any problems
in this. But it is necessary that the state knows where and who is studying so
that young citizens don’t fall in with terrorist organizations and sects.”
But in the age of the Internet,
Tajikistan’s supreme mufti, Saidmukkaram Abdulkolidzoda says, young people who
want to find extremist methods are likely to be able to do so whatever the
government does. Consequently, the struggle with ISIS will continue; and it is
far from clear that either Tajikistan or Russia is winning.
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