India has stepped up security after al Qaeda
announced the formation of a local wing.
In a video posted online, al Qaeda chief Ayman
al-Zawahiri announced it had created an Indian branch and promised to spread
Islamic rule and "raise the flag of jihad" across the "Indian
subcontinent" and Myanmar. Indian authorities said they were taking the
move seriously and put several states on high alert on September 4.
In the meantime, the announcement was hailed by a new
breakaway faction of the Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) called
Jamat-ul-Ahrar. "We believe that the branch will work hard for the
achievement of the rights of Muslims in the subcontinent," the splinter
group's spokesman Ehsanullah Ehsan, said in a message posted on Twitter and
Facebook.
Analysts say al Qaeda has been increasingly overshadowed
by 'Islamic State', a renegade offshoot of the terror group which has managed
to capture vast territory in Syria and Iraq and inspired thousands of fighters
to join its jihadist mission.
So far, terror threats In India have largely come from
neighboring Pakistan and Kashmir, the disputed Himalayan region. Gauri
Khandekar, head of the Asia
Program at the European think tank FRIDE, says in a DW interview that while
there is no evidence of an al Qaeda presence in the subcontinent, the
organization wants to take advantage of the large and young Muslim population
in the region.
DW: How credible are the al
Qaeda chief's claims of expansion and the creation of an Indian branch?
Gauri Khandekar: This is indeed worrisome. It has been
said that al Qaeda (AQ) is trying to compete with IS for recruits and funding,
but what has not been said is that the network is also differentiating itself
from IS geographically. AQ does not want to compete with IS for territory, so
it is trying to claim its own "territory of action" and channeling an
undisclosed amount of its resources on the Indian subcontinent, especially as
foreign troops prepare to leave Afghanistan though it was expected that
terrorists and South Asian terror groups - who migrated to AQ during the
Afghanistan war - would return to their original focus, which is Kashmir,
India. Although AQ has been weakened, it could set off random attacks just to
prove their claim is credible.
How have Indian authorities
reacted to the video message?
India's Intelligence Bureau (IB) announced that the video
was authentic. After meeting with top officials, the country's Home Minister
Rajnath Singh issued an alert to all states and security agencies. The Home
Ministry also asked the IB for an assessment report on AQ's presence in the
country, which is set to be delivered in a day or two.
There is already a large presence of terrorists and
militant groups in the region. On top of that, we have indications of a small
yet growing number of radicalized Indian youth, some of whom have gone to Iraq
and Syria to join IS, while others have been fighting in Pakistan and
Afghanistan.
Is there any evidence that al
Qaeda is being supported by any groups in India or has any operatives there?
Not until now despite the network's previous efforts.
However, it is important to point out that AQ's focus on India is not new.
While they were largely perceived as focusing on the United States, various
threats to India were made following Osama bin Laden's declaration in 1996. AQ
is said to have had links to terrorists and other extremist factions operating
in Kashmir and elsewhere in India via Pakistan-based groups.
Furthermore, there are a number of established Islamic
terror groups active in India such as the India-based Indian Mujahideen (IM),
the Pakistan-based Lashkar-e-Taiba (LeT), the Hizbul-Mujahideen,
Jaish-e-Mohammad, Harkat-e-Mujahideen, Al Badr and others, who have their own
agendas and leadership.
Some of these organizations were set up even before al
Qaeda was founded and most have the Kashmir separatism issue at heart. The
largest among them - IM and LeT - have also declared the same goals as AQ,
namely the establishment of an Islamic caliphate in South Asia and the
imposition of Sharia Law.
These groups normally claim responsibility for terror
attacks in India, so it is unlikely that they would want to share the credit
with al Qaeda or come under its branch, unless they receive major resources
from AQ.
According to Indian security forces, AQ's India
operations will be handled by an IM splinter group based in Pakistan. Pakistani
top AQ operative Asim Umar was named as the operational commander of the
branch. It is more likely that they will seek new recruits. So we can see the
latest video more in the context of AQ announcing vacancies rather than
launching a new branch.
The militant group promised to
"storm your barricades with cars packed with gunpowder." Why would al
Qaeda choose the Indian subcontinent as a target for terrorist acts?
There are several reasons for this. First, the South and
Southeast Asia regions have three times more Muslims than the Middle East.
India alone has around 175 million Muslims - 15 percent of its population -
making it the third largest Muslim-populated country worldwide. AQ wants to
take advantage of this and the fact that South Asia also has a largely young
population.
No comments:
Post a Comment