Reading done on April 17, 2019

"Shamima Begum: Why women support terror"

  • by Martine Zeuthen & Gayatri Sahgal (Rusi)
  • BBC News
  • published on April 17, 2019
  • accessed on April 17, 2019
  • https://www.bbc.com/news/world-47653190

In this article, the authors claim that sometimes women who take part in and support extremism have been been overlooked.

Analysis suggests that 17% of extremist recruits in Africa are women (Rusi).
Another research indicates that 13% of IS foreign recruits in Iraq and Syria are women.
The authors claim that "[t]he exact figure remain vague and could be far higher".

"A number of Rusi-backed studies and others have investigated the roles women play in organisations such as IS and al-Shabab [...]"

The roles played by women vary between groups
In al-Shabab - Women are often seen in more traditional roles such as: wives of fighters, domestic help, and sometimes made to work as sex slaves.
- Women help attract new members.

"One study in Kenya discovered women were lured by others who promised them jobs, financial support and counselling."

"For example, Hidaya (not her real name), a dressmaker, was recruited by a client who offered to invest in and expand her business. She was persuaded to travel to a border region, from where she was smuggled into Somalia.""

In IS
- "[Women] often recruit - especially online - and play an active role in projecting the group's beliefs."
- Women are allowed to serve as doctors and healthcare workers, with certain restrictions
- The group has an all-female morality police force.
- "More recently, as the group lost its territory in Iraq and Syria, it has been willing to place women in frontline roles, using its newspaper al-Naba to call women to jihad, and releasing a video last year showing several in combat in Syria."

Why do women join jihadist groups?
"There are a number of factors driving women's recruitment into these groups.
To an extent, it appears that what motivates men also works for women, such as the pull of strong ideology and financial benefits.
However, tactics aimed specifically at women also emerged, such as the appeal of returning to traditional gender roles.
For instance, one of our studies indicated al-Shabab recruiters preyed on the insecurities of some young Muslim women who feared that higher education would delay their marriage prospects.
"If I get a man who will marry and protect me, why should I stress myself with studies or education?", one Nairobi University student asked researchers."

"Others appear to have been initially attracted by promises of jobs, money and other opportunities. However, discerning their motives for joining is difficult. Many of the women we interviewed claimed they had been recruited against their will."