Jihadi going to Americas - The response to the Liberal Democracy and the Advocates of Fear for their stupid questions of Freedom and Globalization...

Yes, the tradition of the Islamist Faith is being more reconized in the West, it's because the Judeo-Christianity failed at the proposal of the promotion of peace and becoming a political religion.

The liberal democracy treatens the Muslim Faith as an enemy of the west and the answer is the faster growing of the faith in Americas, raising a constant state of fear in the previous christian continent, followint the models of Europe.

Another question to ask is that how it will be considered a point for the international migration from the Countries in that lives the problems of war, at the first the financing groups are promoting the international migration to Europe, but with the depletion of the globalists and the new raise of nationalists, the possible changing in paradigm can bring the migration to Americas, Latin America to be more certain, and the infiltration of Islamo Terrorist groups is imminent.

That can bring the WAR SCENARIO to Americas for the first time, implementing a proxy war between the East and USA in American soil and promoting physical conflicts in few moments, as the excuse to promotion of the conflict can be seeing in the preemption maneouver at the terrorist scenario, with the logic of the preventive attack, implementing the counter terrorim measure before it starts.

Some countries already abrigate some groups reconized by the terrorists as alied, like Trinidad and Tobago and Venezuela, that finances the terrorists as a militia pro Maduro against the own population.

Trinidad and Tobago – A Little Country That Is Big in Jihad
September 26, 2018  in Articles
https://eeradicalization.com/trinidad-and-tobago-a-little-country-that-is-big-in-jihad/

At first glance, Shane Dominic Crawford and Tariq Abdul Haqq have nothing in common besides being citizens of Trinidad and Tobago, the Caribbean island nation located between Grenada and Venezuela.

On the dark side, Shane was a gangster with a long career in crime and the prime suspect in the attempted murder of the prime minister in 2011.

On the bright side, Tariq was a hero who won the silver medal in the super heavyweight boxing class at the Commonwealth Games. He was son of Yacoob Abdul Haqq, another boxing legend and nephew of one of the most important lawyers in the country.

Despite these differences, both became poster boys for the terrorists of Islamic State (IS). Both may have been killed somewhere in Syria.

Shane and Tariq are not the only mystery in the Caribbean concerning IS’s connections. A few months ago, the secret services found that between 100 to 300 Trinidadians had joined IS.

With a population of just 1.3 million, this makes for one of the highest per capita rates of IS recruitment in the world. Roughly the same number of people joined Islamic State from the far

larger countries of America and Canada. To add further perspective, Portugal provided fewer recruits than Trinidad and Tobago , even though it is a country of 10 million people.

This phenomenon is difficult to explain. There is no obvious connection between the country and the self-proclaimed caliphate. The Muslim community make up 5 to 10% of the population and it is generally moderate and peaceful. The country has had free elections since the 1983 coup. The economy is in good shape with high production of nutmeg, mace, cinnamon, ginger, and cloves and a thriving international oil and gas industry. The tropical landscapes attract thousands of tourists from all over the world.

So, what went wrong?

The alarm bells rang last February. Days ahead of the annual Carnival celebrations, the leading cultural event on the islands, local authorities arrested thirteen young men, all Muslims, on suspicion of plotting to carry out attacks in the country. The UK Foreign Office warned about an ongoing threat even after the arrests: “Terrorists are very likely to try to carry out attacks in Trinidad and Tobago.”

Some days later, almost all the suspects were released. The country did not suffer any terrorist attack during the national celebration. But Trinidad and Tobago does not have an immaculate past when it comes to fundamentalist conspiracies.

In the summer of 1990, the Jamaat-al-Muslimeen, a radical group led by Lennox Philip, aka Yasin Abu Bakr, tried to kill the Prime Minister Artur Robinson, members of his cabinet and deputies and take hostages. This political nightmare left 24 people dead and more than 200 injured in a rampage of arson and pillaging by Abu Bakr’s followers. The leader was arrested but in the end he was released with an amnesty.

The independent defense analyst and attorney-at-law Sanjay Badri-Maharaj, based in Trinidad and Tobago, says that in the years that followed this failed plot three other groups arose from the ashes of Jamaat-al-Muslimeen: Waajatul Islaamiyah, known for publishing newsletters supporting al-Qaeda, Jamaat al Islami al Karibi, and Jamaat al Murabiteen.

Badri-Maharaj has assessed the roots of the problem: “The power wielded by these groups has helped to create a fertile ground for recruitment into potential Jihadist groups. With a close nexus to urban criminal gangs, the link between extremists and criminals is often blurred. The allure of the gangs has attracted many disaffected urban youths. The membership of these groups and their associated criminal gangs keeps expanding, with recruits falling prey to the potent mix of propaganda and the lure of the perceived empowerment offered by these groups.”

The Waajatul Islaamiyah (Islamic Front) leader, Umar Abdullah, has even admitted publicly that he was recruiting young Muslims to IS. And radical preachers such as Yasin Abu Bakr have not disappeared.

In 2015 and 2016, two IS videos and an interview showed the world that Trinidad and Tobago’s fighters are in the top league of terrorism. A jihadist named Abu Zaid al-Muhajir announced that he had brought three children to the caliphate. Another fighter, Abu Khalid, stated that Muslims in Trinidad and Tobago were confined and persecuted. And finally, styling himself as Abu Sa’d at-Trinidadi, Shane Dominic Crawford of the dark side of society gave an interview to Dabiq magazine, a sort of Vanity Fair of terror.

In the interview, Shane explained his conversion, his journey to the caliphate, and a threat of death to the infidels. This was his message to his country’s youth: “You now have a golden opportunity to do something that many of us here wish we could do right now. You have the ability to terrify the disbelievers in their own homes and make their streets run with their blood.”

Did the message have impact? For sure. It is not by chance that Trinidad became a case study in jihadist matters. And it’s nothing to do with nice and tropical weather.

Today, the caliphate is shrinking and local self-confidence is growing at the same rate. The attorney general, Faris Al Rawi, has denied that Trinidad had a problem with IS recruitment or religious extremism: “The number may look larger than somewhere else, but I don’t accept for one moment that we have a problem that is much bigger than anywhere else,” he said in an interview with The Guardian. “I don’t think that we are any more vulnerable than any other country is.”

In the same report, the anthropologist Dylan Kerrigan, a lecturer at the University of the West Indies, observes that the terrorist group is not much different from a gang. Each “provides a family, male role models, social order and it promises access to what many young men might think they want: money, power, women, respect.”

Today, most of the Trinidad and Tobago volunteers are dead or in the hands of the Kurds or the Syrian army. Nobody travels from the Caribbean to Syria anymore as they did two years ago. But you can feel the fear of the returnees and their harmful influence among young Muslims. So have the authorities learned anything from the 1990 plot or from the recent Carnival threat? Or could things happen again in the same radical mosques or under the mask of obscure organizations?

In this field, Fuad Abu Bakr is a politician of note. He is the son of Yasin Abu Bakr, the leader of the failed 1990 coup d’état. He leads the New National Vision, a political party that defends “the poor and working class” and mixes Islamic doctrine and 1970’s black power rhetoric.

In a recent Al-Jazeera report, Fuad said it is time to understand the full spectrum of Trinidadians who join ISIS: “When a Muslim sees these videos of decapitating people on the beach and music playing in the background and these gory things, many of them do not trust these images. They say, ‘Who verified this footage?’”

He goes on: “If I have a friend who has already travelled to Syria and he is sending me pictures of schools with kids and gardens and a society that is operating by Islamic laws, that would interest a Muslim individual. I think some people feel that there is no hope in changing the political system that exists here. And I strongly believe that some of these individuals say, ‘Maybe we will make more of a difference there’.”

New National Vision is still a small party with little influence in Trinidadian society. At least at present…

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