• 06:58
  • Tuesday ,23 December 2014
العربية

Egypt youth embracing radicalization

By The Daily Star

Copts and Poliltical Islam

00:12

Tuesday ,23 December 2014

Egypt youth embracing radicalization

After a long wait, Ansar Beit al-Maqdis – a group active in northern Sinai – has moved from the stage of sympathizing with ISIS to being a part of the international organization. It has sworn allegiance to ISIS and changed its name to Wilayat Sinai. This is but one reflection of the growing radicalization among Egyptians, particularly Islamist youth.The formal announcement of the pledge of allegiance was delayed – after Ansar Beit al-Maqdis’ preacher prayed for ISIS during this year’s Eid al-Fitr prayers – because the group held a consultation between all jihadi factions in Sinai. While some of them objected to the pledge, given that they had already sworn allegiance to Al-Qaeda leader Ayman al-Zawahiri, in the end they agreed to support ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, according to sources close to the group.

This announcement of allegiance has intensified Ansar Beit al-Maqdis’ confrontation with the Egyptian government and reflects the use of more aggressive methods to counter its crackdown in Sinai. Ansar Beit al-Maqdis released subsequent statements saying it considers any individual in the army to be a target. These remarks coincide with an escalation in the year-and-a-half campaign waged by the Egyptian state to confront militants in northern Sinai, particularly following the Oct. 24 attack on the Karm al-Qawadis checkpoint in Sheikh Zuweid, during which 28 Egyptian soldiers were killed in the bloodiest attack since the ouster of President Mohammad Morsi in July 2013. The state has evicted residents of Rafah and established a buffer zone on the border with Gaza. A three-month state of emergency has been imposed in the area and a curfew put in place from 5 p.m. and 7 a.m.

Despite these intensified security measures and the ongoing military campaign, jihadi attacks continue. The Egyptian army’s popularity is declining daily in Sinai, which has aided the group’s support and helped it attract recruits amid an increasing number of civilian deaths. In a recent incident in Rafah, 10 members of the same family were killed, including three children and three women.

A growing number Islamist youths, in light of the military’s crackdown on religious parties, are welcoming Ansar Beit al-Maqdis’ pledge of allegiance to ISIS. For the first time, chants in support of the group were heard in Cairo’s demonstrations on Nov. 21. Some protesters carried the black flag of ISIS and renounced peaceful means, something they had called for over the past year and a half, under the pretext that adopting a peaceful approach was a key reason the new regime is even more authoritarian than Hosni Mubarak’s.

The Salafist Front, which until Dec. 4 was part of the National Alliance to Support Legitimacy (an Islamist political coalition that opposes Morsi’s ouster), organized the “Muslim Youth Uprising” protests that took place on Nov. 28; demonstrators raised black flags in the Matriya district of Cairo. On the same day, Ansar Beit al-Maqdis, to show support for the uprising, carried out three attacks in Cairo, Qalyubiyah and North Sinai that killed an army officer and three recruits and injured two officers and dozens of policemen. Some of the Muslim Brotherhood youths announced that they would participate in the uprising as well, only to back out the night before to hold their own separate protests.

The following day, Nov. 29, a judicial ruling was issued that acquitted Mubarak, his two sons, former Interior Minister Habib al-Adly, and the latter’s aides of charges of killing protesters. This ruling heightened the anger these youth felt, pushing them further toward supporting a local affiliation for ISIS. Meanwhile, thousands of those who participated in and called for the Jan. 25 revolution languish inside prisons, and hundreds of others have been sentenced to death. Following the verdict, a number of youth – particularly from the Muslim Brotherhood – launched the hashtag campaign #ISIS_is_the_solution on Facebook and Twitter. This slogan played on “Islam is the solution,” a well-known slogan of the Muslim Brotherhood’s from the Mubarak era.

Rising support for ISIS in Sinai and elsewhere represents the small but growing conviction that the state’s violence can only be met with counter-violence. This gradual shift toward violence began with the breakup of the Rabia al-Adawiya sit-in in August 2013, which led to the death of as many as 1,000 people, according to Human Rights Watch. Some Muslim Brotherhood youths have since immersed themselves in the writings and ideology of Sayyid Qutb and shared his articles and writings on social networking sites. They now mock peaceful slogans they themselves had adopted in the past, such as “our peacefulness is stronger than bullets.” Some have also begun to express intent to join ISIS and participate in extending the caliphate so that Islamic conquerors can enter Egypt.

These days, the Brotherhood is split between those who call for an “Islamic Revolution” that entails allying with jihadis and focusing on Morsi’s return to power and those who support a “popular revolution” that entails allying with liberal movements and garnering the international community’s support for removing President Abdel-Fattah al-Sisi and his government.

The Muslim Brotherhood’s recent statements about participation in the “Muslim Youth Uprising” illustrate these internal tensions. Party leaders – as well as leaders of Gamaa Islamiya and other Islamic parties, such as Al-Wasat and the Homeland Party (Al-Watan) – declared they would not participate in the Salafist-organized protests and that demands and slogans must be unified among the various strata of Egyptian society.

While the Muslim Brotherhood still officially rejects violence as an approach, it has encouraged resisting the authorities and security services in “innovative ways” by cutting off roads, burning government buildings, and exhausting the regime economically and politically. While many among the Brotherhood’s youth continue down the radicalization path, some of the group’s leaders are trying to position themselves as an alternative, a centrist force between the jihadis and the security services that can play a role down the road to placate both jihadi and liberals. In the meantime, many among the group’s leadership continue to promote the idea that allowing the Brotherhood to participate in a democratic process – despite the group’s mistakes during its experience in government – would have been better than the country sliding into this cycle of violence and counter-violence.

As the government continues its repressive approach, there is a growing feeling among youths that they have lost their dreams of “freedom and human dignity” three years after the Jan. 25 revolution. More than 47,000 people languish in Egyptian prisons, according to a member of the Egyptian Coordination of Rights and Freedoms, who said that 3,000 people were arrested just in the one week before the “Muslim Youth Uprising.” It seems that real political dialogue is all but gone in Egypt amid the growing expansion of state oppression and the subsequent uptick in terrorist activity in response.

An increasing number of Islamist youth and sympathizers are embracing violence. If the political landscape continues to retract and the Sisi regime refuses to release detained youth, including Islamists, more trouble will follow, because Egyptian prisons are notorious as breeding grounds for extremism. Tensions in Egypt could evolve into more violence, making the country more susceptible to terrorist attacks.