Australia's spy agency has been enlisted to help crack down on radicalisation in jails after revelations Aboriginal prisoners are converting to Islam and risk becoming extremists.
Sheikhs and
imams are being brought into prisons to deliver de-radicalisation messages
during Friday prayers, but two prominent Sydney sheikhs have told a high-level
forum that chaplaincy services are grossly under-funded and prison converts are
misinterpreting the religion.
A small but
high-risk group of radicals are causing concern to Corrective Services NSW and
it is believed recruitment to Islam is active, particularly among Aboriginal
inmates.
Sheikh Omar
Hammouche, who has worked with inmates and prison chaplains, says faith is a
powerful tool in the reformation of prisoners but the lack of Muslim chaplaincy
services in NSW means prison converts are misinterpreting Islam.
There are
just two Muslim chaplains spread across 10 of the state's prisons.
Sheikh Omar
told a Corrective Services-sponsored forum at Sydney University's Law School
last month that Islam was primarily taught face-to-face and knowledge needed to
be properly explained.
He cited the
case of one of British soldier Lee Rigby's killers, who wildly
misinterpreted a line from the Koran - "kill the unbelievers wherever you
see them" – to justify the stabbing on a London street.
"There
isn’t enough capacity to address the needs and the requirements of the Muslim
inmates," Sheikh Omar said. "When there are insufficient chaplaincy
services appointed, we find that people then rely on other means to get their
Islamic education ... Yes, you may be able to police the information they have,
the books they receive but you can’t police the understanding they take from
that or the application."
About 9 per
cent of inmates in NSW are Muslim, even though only 3 per cent of the general
population identifies as Islamic.
Sheikh Omar
said many had a poor understanding of Islam. "Dare I say, if they knew
their religion ... they wouldn’t be in prison in the first place so they need
that face-to-face instruction."
Some imams
and sheikhs struggled to communicate effectively with inmates. Senior
management began consulting with the Muslim community in western Sydney a year
ago and sharing information and contacts with intelligence authorities.
Sheikh Shady
Alsuleiman, secretary of the Australian National Imams Council, told the forum
many prison imams were avoiding hot topics such as jihad, Syria and Iraq
for fear of being labelled jihadi supporters.
"These
are topics our youth want to hear," he said. "If I’m not going to
address it in the proper form, then they will go listen to someone else."
Australian
National University researcher Clarke Jones, who is writing a book on prison
radicalisation, said extremist conversions were rare because terrorism inmates
tended to be at the bottom of the prison pecking order in Australia.
He cited the
recent case of Sydney man Khaled Sharrouf, who posted images of himself
fighting in Iraq and standing over slaughtered bodies, as an unusual case of an
inmate committing acts of jihad upon release.
Sharrouf
served four years for his role in the Pendennis terror plot and recently said
on Twitter he received weekly lessons from al-Qaeda leader Abu
Muhammad al-Maqdisi via the jail phone, a claim that had not been
verified.
"The
problem is a lot of these de-radicalisation programs are very generic ... and
tend to be a one-size-fits-all model," Dr Clarke said.
Asmi Wood,
senior research fellow at the National Centre for Indigenous Studies, was aware
of Aboriginal conversions in prison and said elders were concerned that
converts would join foreign jihad but he had seen no evidence of it.
Rod Moore,
chaplaincy co-ordinator for Corrective Services NSW, told the conference NSW
had "a long way to go" to increase chaplaincy services but the
program led the way globally
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/imams-called-in-as-aboriginal-inmates-warm-to-radical-islam-20140723-zvzb1.html#ixzz38KzHtKUt
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/imams-called-in-as-aboriginal-inmates-warm-to-radical-islam-20140723-zvzb1.html#ixzz38KzHtKUt
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