JavaScript is disabled in your web browser or browser is too old to support JavaScript. Today almost all web pages contain JavaScript, a scripting programming language that runs on visitor's web browser. It makes web pages functional for specific purposes and if disabled for some reason, the content or the functionality of the web page can be limited or unavailable.

Wednesday, April 2, 2025

German writer finds Trinis among Isis

They're bent on killing mil­lions

by

20141223

Af­ter an ac­count by a Ger­man au­thor, now back from ex­am­in­ing the Is­lam­ic State of Iraq and Syr­ia (Isis) in Iraq and who en­coun­tered re­cruits from T&T in Mo­sul, Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter Gary Grif­fith has con­firmed there are 12 T&T na­tion­als who are with Isis, main­ly per­sons who were in­volved in crime and gang-re­lat­ed ac­tiv­i­ties in T&T.

Grif­fith was con­tact­ed yes­ter­day fol­low­ing break­ing re­ports from for­mer Ger­man politi­cian Juer­gen To­den­hoe­fer, who spent just over a week in the Isis-con­trolled city of Mo­sul, Iraq, and two oth­er sim­i­lar ar­eas in Syr­ia and Iraq. Grant­ed un­prece­dent­ed ac­cess, he spoke to Isis fight­ers and child sol­diers.To­den­hoe­fer, 74, who had ob­ject­ed to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, had ne­go­ti­at­ed for the vis­it with the rad­i­cal Is­lam­ic group for sev­en months but at the end he said he re­turned home pes­simistic.

He filed a re­port de­tail­ing is­sues he not­ed dur­ing his vis­it, in­clud­ing sex-slav­ery trau­ma, how ex­trem­ist groups raised mon­ey and oth­er mat­ters.He said Isis was stronger, more bru­tal and hard­er to con­front than he had ex­pect­ed and found Isis fol­low­ers high­ly mo­ti­vat­ed and sup­port­ive of the group's bru­tal­i­ty.He said he "met child fight­ers bear­ing arms" and en­coun­tered re­cruits from around the world, in­clud­ing US, UK, Swe­den and T&T." The num­bers in­clud­ed 14 Amer­i­cans.

To­den­hoe­fer said he was struck by their bru­tal zeal and the scale of their am­bi­tion to car­ry out "re­li­gious cleans­ing" and to ex­pand their ter­ri­to­ry.He is quot­ed as say­ing: "They are the most bru­tal and most dan­ger­ous en­e­my I have ever seen in my life... (it's) ter­ri­ble to feel peo­ple can be en­thu­si­as­tic about killing hun­dreds of mil­lions of peo­ple."There's an en­thu­si­asm I have nev­er seen be­fore in war zones. They are so con­fi­dent, so sure of them­selves."

To­den­hoe­fer warned Isis was bent on re­li­gious cleans­ing."It's their of­fi­cial phi­los­o­phy. They are talk­ing about 500 mil­lion peo­ple have to die," he added.He said there was a con­stant stream of men com­ing to sign up to fight. He ex­plained: "When we stayed at their re­cruit­ment house there were 50 new fight­ers who came every day. I just could not be­lieve the glow in their eyes. They felt like they were com­ing to a promised land, like they were fight­ing for the right thing.

"At the be­gin­ning of this year few peo­ple knew of Isis but now they have con­quered an area the size of the UK. This is a one per cent move­ment with the pow­er of a nu­clear bomb or a tsuna­mi. "I had the im­pres­sion they want to show the Is­lam­ic State is work­ing. I don't see any­one who has a re­al chance to stop them. On­ly Arabs can stop Isis. I came back very pes­simistic."

T&T women be­ing used as de­coys

Con­tact­ed yes­ter­day, Na­tion­al Se­cu­ri­ty Min­is­ter Gary Grif­fith told the T&T Guardian apart from the 12 con­firmed cas­es of peo­ple leav­ing T&T to fight with Isis' 30,000-strong For­eign Ter­ror­ist Fight­ers (FTFs) com­ple­ment from over 80 coun­tries, Gov­ern­ment was mon­i­tor­ing T&T women who were go­ing and act­ing as sup­port for male T&T na­tion­als.

"Some are ac­com­pa­ny­ing the men to make it look like it's a fam­i­ly trav­el­ling nor­mal­ly to try to fool au­thor­i­ties that they are on le­git­i­mate trav­el pur­pos­es," he added.Grif­fith said in­tel­li­gence re­ports have con­firmed that the T&T na­tion­als who have gone to join Isis were large­ly those in­volved with rad­i­cal Is­lam­ic sects and who had been in­volved in crime lo­cal­ly.

He said se­cu­ri­ty agen­cies have al­so red flagged a num­ber of peo­ple of in­ter­est in T&T who were aid­ing and abet­ting T&T na­tion­als in go­ing to Iraq (via Syr­ia), by pro­vid­ing fi­nanc­ing and as­sist­ing with get­ting visas and trav­el doc­u­ments for them. The route is usu­al­ly through Eu­rope and Turkey.Grif­fith said: "The sit­u­a­tion means we can­not af­ford to heed, for in­stance, PNM protests and play pos­sum. Those days are gone."

Af­ter co-spon­sor­ing the UN counter-ter­ror­ism res­o­lu­tion in Sep­tem­ber, he said T&T was now ex­am­in­ing ways to pre­vent the re­turn to T&T of any FTFs. He said he was seek­ing meet­ings with the UK and US on that to pool in­for­ma­tion, since re­turn routes could take peo­ple through such coun­tries.He added: "If they want to be fool­ish enough to go there (Iraq), we don't want them to come back. Let them stay there."

"One thing I won't com­pro­mise on this is in­fil­tra­tion and the dif­fer­ence be­tween in­tel­li­gence and ev­i­dence on this could be a ter­ror­ist act in T&T so on this as­pect we will act on in­tel­li­gence and if this shows some­one is or was in­volved in ter­ror­ist ac­tiv­i­ty, we won't wait to ar­rest them."

Venezuela case on­go­ing

On the five T&T na­tion­als de­tained in Venezuela since March 19 on al­leged ter­ror­ist ac­tiv­i­ties, Grif­fith said he had spo­ken with at­tor­ney Nafeesa Mo­hammed and their fam­i­lies, who have in­sist­ed the men are not in­volved in the al­leged ac­tiv­i­ty.Grif­fith said he in­tend­ed to meet on the is­sue with the Venezue­lan am­bas­sador through the For­eign Af­fairs Min­istry but he stressed Gov­ern­ment could not force any sov­er­eign state's hand on such is­sues.

Al­so con­tact­ed yes­ter­day, Mo­hammed said she met Grif­fith two weeks ago on the is­sue. She said, how­ev­er, that the case was still at a pre­lim­i­nary stage and no date was set for hear­ing.

More in­fo

The T&T Guardian had re­ceived re­ports at mid-year that at least one of the Tri­nis who had gone to Syr­ia to fight last year was killed and the busi­ness­man's south­ern rel­a­tives had prayers for him.On the pos­si­bil­i­ty that the pass­ports or oth­er ID ma­te­r­i­al of such T&T na­tion­als could be used by Isis mem­bers to en­ter T&T, Grif­fith said it would be dif­fi­cult to ma­nip­u­late lo­cal pass­ports due to the elec­tron­ic sys­tems now in use.

Say­ing ter­ror­ists have shift­ed in re­cent years to "soft" tar­gets in­volv­ing less­er risk, such as the gen­er­al cit­i­zen­ry, Grif­fith said it was par­tic­u­lar­ly cru­cial to mon­i­tor cer­tain T&T groups, or­gan­i­sa­tions and fam­i­lies, as in­tel­li­gence agen­cies have been do­ing, to track their as­sis­tance to ter­ror­ists.He not­ed the re­cent at­tack on the Cana­di­an Par­lia­ment and that Aus­tralia re­cent­ly thwart­ed an Isis plot on its home turf al­so.

He said T&T would al­so re­ceive the ar­moured per­son­nel car­ri­ers, sim­i­lar to ones used to deal with the Cana­di­an Par­lia­ment at­tack, in the next month or two.


Related articles

Sponsored

Weather

PORT OF SPAIN WEATHER

Sponsored