UK asks Muslim women to help curb Syria trips
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Police reach out to wives, mothers and sisters in drive to
stop young British men travelling to and fighting in Syria.
Last updated: 24 Apr
2014 05:30
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The campaign was prompted by an
increase in Britons caught travelling or returning from Syria [AP]
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British police will
ask Muslim women to help persuade young people not to fight in Syria, in a
new campaign to halt an exodus which authorities fear could breed fighters at
home.
Hundreds of Britons
are thought to have flown out
to join rebels fighting the forces of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Senior police officers
and security chiefs have said they are worried the fighters could return and
carry out attacks on British soil, the Reuters news agency reported.
Britain's
counter-terrorism police said they were going to appeal to women from "affected
communities".
"We are
increasingly concerned about the numbers of young people who have or are
intending ... to join the conflict," Helen Ball, National Coordinator
for Counter Terrorism Policing, said in a statement ahead of Thursday's
launch.
"We want to
ensure that people, particularly women, who are concerned about their loved
ones are given enough information about what they can do to prevent this from
happening."
Last week a father
living in the English town of Brighton, Abubaker Deghayes, revealed that
three of his sons had gone to fight in Syria, one of whom was killed in a
battle, the AFP news agency reported.
Abdullah Deghayes, 18,
died earlier this month after leaving Britain in January, while his
20-year-old brother Amer suffered a bullet wound to the stomach in the same
clash.
Police will hold
meetings across Britain on Thursday with women from different community
groups, charity workers and government officials involved in preventing
extremism.
A leaflet has been
prepared outlining the risks of travelling to Syria, which will be handed out
at airports and ports.
Monitoring charities
The Charities
Commission is also involved in the campaign, to advise people on how they can
help send humanitarian aid to Syria without the money falling into the hands
of extremists.
The commission's
chairman, William Shawcross, warned
at the weekend that charities should be particularly vigilant
about how their aid is used in countries such as Syria and Somalia.
Three charities are
being investigated for Syria fundraising, while seven others are being
monitored.
Andrew Parker, the
Director General of MI5's domestic spy agency, said in
October a growing proportion of his casework involved Syria,
"mostly concerning individuals from the UK who have travelled to fight
there or who aspire to do so".
Parker led MI5's
response to the 2005 suicide bomb attacks on London which killed 52
civilians. Some of the bombers are thought to have received training in
al-Qaeda camps in Afghanistan and Pakistan.
On Tuesday France announced a
series of measures to stop its citizens from travelling to Syria
to take part in the civil war and to punish those who did.
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This blog is a part of my body of research that seeks to analyse civil society's and academia's understanding of national security models from an academic perspective with a focus on Canada, Israel and the UK.
05 May 2014
Al Jazeera: UK asks Muslim women to help curb Syria trips
Source: http://www.aljazeera.com/news/europe/2014/04/uk-police-syria-appeal-muslim-women-201442323739408972.html
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