Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 3 – Central Asian
men from the Hizb ut-Tahrir Islamist group are ever more frequently leaving the
region for Russia; and their places in that radical group are being taken by
Central Asian men, according to Leyla Asulbekova, in a development that is both
new and a threat to both Russia and Central Asia.
On the one hand, her findings
suggest that ever more members of that group are now in Russia and may engage
in terrorism or other forms of extremism; and on the other, they point to the
emergence of a phenomenon that the governments in Central Asia have little
experience with or ability to counter.
Asylbekova, a psychologist, presented
these findings to a Kazakhstan conference on “The Role of Women’s Organizations
in the Spiritual Education of Youth and in the Formation of Immunity to Radical
Religious Ideology” (kazislam.kz/ru/songy-janalyktar/item/14858-zhenshchiny-vytesnyayut-muzhchin-iz-khizb-ut-takhrir-v-srednej-azii-uchenye).
She
said that her fellow specialists on Islamist groups concurred with her
conclusions, adding that in her opinion the recent increase in the share of
women in Hizb ut-Tahrir in Central Asia is disturbing because “female
fanaticism is much stronger and more horrific than its male counterpart.”
One
of the reasons women have moved into the ranks of such groups, Asylbekova
suggested, is that women have been radicalized by the fact that in Kazakhstan
and other Central Asian countries, women have made some progress on various
career ladders but have yet to be allowed to reach the very top of any of them.
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