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TERROR WARS
Russia's Caucasus Islamists 'pledge allegiance' to IS
By Maria ANTONOVA
Moscow (AFP) June 24, 2015


Tajikistan changes citizenship law amid IS threat
Dushanbe, Tajikistan (AFP) June 24, 2015 - The parliament of ex-Soviet Tajikistan passed a law Wednesday annulling the citizenship of nationals fighting abroad with militant organisations including the radical Islamic State group active in Iraq and Syria.

"People will automatically be stripped of their citizenship of the republic of Tajikistan if they fight in the ranks of terrorist groups and organisations abroad," Zarif Alizoda, the central Asian country's human rights ombudsman said in parliament.

MPs voted unanimously in favour of the bill.

The impoverished republic says more than 400 Tajiks have joined the brutal IS insurgency in Iraq and Syria, including a high profile defector that once headed the special forces unit of the interior ministry.

Many nationals are recruited to fight for the group in Russia, where over a million work as migrant labourers, Tajik security services say.

In May, Colonel Gulmurod Halimov, a former commander of the interior ministry's special forces unit, shocked the country by announcing in a twelve-minute video clip appearing on YouTube that he had defected to IS as a result of perceived anti-Islamic policies in the tightly-controlled state.

He appeared again in a second online clip this month, threatening to decapitate his brother for publically asking him to return to his homeland and face punishment.

This week, photos surfaced on social media that appeared to show Halimov being treated for injuries.

Tajik security services did not comment on the photos.

Tajikistan, which is the most remittance-dependent country in the world according to the World Bank, declared IS a terrorist organisation immediately after Halimov announced his defection.

Islamist militants in four regions of Russia's Caucasus have pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group, according to a recording which was welcomed by IS after being posted online.

The news sparked fears that the jihadist group's influence is growing among the region's younger generation of Islamists, and that they may try to prove themselves by staging brutal attacks on Russian soil.

The voice recording posted on YouTube on Sunday said militants in Russia's Dagestan, Chechnya, Ingushetia and Kabardino-Balkaria regions had all sworn fealty to IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.

"We testify that all mujahedeen of the Caucasus... are united in this decision and there are no disagreements among us on this issue," the male voice says, listing the four Russian regions in the recording both in Arabic and Russian.

An IS spokesman on Tuesday welcomed the news, naming a young local warlord as the group's Caucasus leader.

"We congratulate the soldiers of Islamic State in the Caucasus... We congratulate them for making allegiance to the caliph," Abu Mohammed al-Adnani said in a recording of his own.

"He accepts your allegiance and names Sheikh Abu Mohammad al-Qadari as (governor) of the Caucasus."

Photos on jihadist websites identified al-Qadari as Rustam Aselderov, a former "amir" for the Dagestan region in the Caucasus Emirate insurgent group who was ousted after pledging allegiance to Baghdadi in December, becoming the first major leader to do so in the Caucasus.

He is a "young man who represents what the insurgency is today" who has no serious religious education and is oriented towards jihad, said Varvara Parkhomenko, a consultant for the International Crisis Group (ICG) and an expert on the North Caucasus.

Parkhomenko said the pledge is the latest event in the evolution of the Caucasus insurgency from a nationalist regional force to part of a global phenomenon where few members participated in the wars for Chechen independence over the last two decades.

"When the insurgency was local, they had to take into account that they act on their own territory, brutal attacks were not supported by the population," she said. "Now if they get tied up to foreign structures, such methods may become relevant."

"This is a very serious process and a challenge for Russia," she said.

- 'Attacks in Russia' imminent? -

Alexei Malashenko, an expert on religion and security at the Carnegie Center in Moscow, said the latest pledge could be mere words, but could also lead to attacks in Russia by IS converts, who are essentially adopting a foreign agenda.

"Since they've joined, now they have to somehow show themselves, with attacks in Russia," he said. "I don't exclude future attacks."

Though it is relatively far from its domain, the Islamic State group has shown interest in Russia in the past, even launching a Russian-language glossy magazine last month.

Last year, IS militants issued a threat to President Vladimir Putin, vowing to oust him and "liberate" North Caucasus.

On Wednesday, the deputy secretary of Russia's security council Yevgeny Lukyanov estimated there are "up to 2,000" Russians fighting with IS, adding that many "pretend to be tourists who lost their documents" when they return, usually via Turkey.

Early this month Turkish authorities detained a 19-year-old female student from Moscow who quit philosophy studies to fly to Istanbul and tried to cross into Syria.

Parkhomenko of the ICG said that the new generation of Caucasus Islamists may not be after the same goals as the old guard who fought to create a state for themselves.

"Now many are ideologically motivated," she said. "They want to die and go to heaven."


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