Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 18 – Islamic radicals
are focusing on ever younger people, Gevorg Minasyan of the CIS Anti-Terrorism
Center says. Over the last decade, its recruits have declined in age from 27 to
12 to 13, with Islamists using the Internet and especially computer games to begin
the recruiting process for young people in Russia and other CIS countries.
Moscow and other CIS capitals, he
continues, had been focusing on Islamist approaches to students and junior
specialists in the oil, military and medical professions. But in response, ISIS
recruiters have “changed tactics.” Five years ago, they were recruiting people at
the age of nine. Now, they focus on children as young as six (rg.ru/2018/05/17/kak-musulmane-otbiraiut-islam-u-radikalov.html).
One of the reasons
they have had success, Minasyan and other experts say, is that in computer games,
most players have multiple lives, something that sends the message that “online
death is conditional and life is easily reset. This devalues death in the eyes
of children and is used by the recruiters.”
Ramzil Valeyev of the Tatarstan
State Council says that Russian schools must explain “to children that reality
is not virtual and that the Internet is not anonymous.” But that is a challenge because young people
spend an increasing number of hours each day online and accept the Internet’s
values which Islamists can easily exploit.
No comments:
Post a Comment