Techniec
Drugs and Kalashnikovs
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/01/22/tunisia-suicide-bomber-syria_n_4550610.html
TUNIS, Tunisia -- Mohamed Ikbel has grown accustomed to the phone calls at seemingly every hour of the day. Parents plead with him to help track down sons who have gone to Syria, joining the ranks of Islamist-inspired rebels seeking to topple the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.
Ikbel knows the story too well. His own brother, Hamza -- bound to a wheelchair and struggling to find himself in his tumultuous 20s -- turned up in Syria last year, having been recruited by jihadists who planned to deploy him as a suicide bomber. Ikbel's passionate campaign to win his brother's return miraculously persuaded the militants to send Hamza home.
Since then, Ikbel has devoted himself to helping other Tunisians track down their own relatives caught up in the conflict in Syria. In the past nine months, roughly 200 Tunisians have called him seeking assistance, he estimates.
"It's not the end of the story," he tells The WorldPost. "It's a disease. There will be more."
Three years after the youth-led revolution that toppled longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali -- the opening act of the anti-authoritarian wave known as the Arab Spring -- Tunisia is frequently cited as a success story, an example of a country that is building the infrastructure for potentially enduring democracy, in contrast to Egypt, where the military is back in charge. Yet many young Tunisians remain deeply dissatisfied with the state of domestic life. Millions still contend with the same struggles that catalyzed their revolutionary movement -- a stark shortage of jobs, brazen corruption, and a sense that the economic spoils tilt toward a well-connected few. Some have become so embittered that they are joining the cause of rebels fighting next door in Syria.
In short, the same discontent that provoked the Arab Spring in the very nation of its beginning now appears to be fueling the rise of regional Islamist extremism, adding fresh recruits to the bloody war in neighboring Syria.
"By monitoring jihadist media, it's clear that Tunisian nationals compose one of the largest portions of foreign fighters in Syria, on par with Libya but perhaps eclipsed by Saudi [Arabia]," says Charles Lister, a Syria expert and visiting fellow at the Brookings Doha Center.
No one really knows how many Tunisians are fighting in Syria, or how many have died there, but nearly 200 have been publicly reported as killed in combat so far, Lister says.
Ikbel says his brother first crossed the border to Libya, where he took part in combat training, a sort of crash course to insurgency. He then flew from Benghazi to Turkey, where he pretended to be a tourist at the airport in Istanbul. From there, he drove to southeast Turkey -- a hub for both Syrian refugees fleeing bloodshed and Syrian rebels -- and snuck across the border into Syria. He followed a well-beaten path taken by many Tunisian men before him.
A brother of one of the 43 men who made headlines in Tunisia last year after being captured with rebels in Syria and sent to a regime prison spoke to The WorldPost on condition of anonymity. He says his "normal, open-minded" 28-year-old brother traveled to Libya in March 2012, telling his family he was going for work, when in reality he was training with other jihadists. He was ultimately arrested while fighting in Damascus.
"We tried everything to get him back," the brother said, with an air of defeat. Unlike Ikbel's story of hope, he knows his brother may never make it home.
TUNIS, Tunisia -- Mohamed Ikbel has grown accustomed to the phone calls at seemingly every hour of the day. Parents plead with him to help track down sons who have gone to Syria, joining the ranks of Islamist-inspired rebels seeking to topple the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.
Ikbel knows the story too well. His own brother, Hamza -- bound to a wheelchair and struggling to find himself in his tumultuous 20s -- turned up in Syria last year, having been recruited by jihadists who planned to deploy him as a suicide bomber. Ikbel's passionate campaign to win his brother's return miraculously persuaded the militants to send Hamza home.
Since then, Ikbel has devoted himself to helping other Tunisians track down their own relatives caught up in the conflict in Syria. In the past nine months, roughly 200 Tunisians have called him seeking assistance, he estimates.
"It's not the end of the story," he tells The WorldPost. "It's a disease. There will be more."
Three years after the youth-led revolution that toppled longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali -- the opening act of the anti-authoritarian wave known as the Arab Spring -- Tunisia is frequently cited as a success story, an example of a country that is building the infrastructure for potentially enduring democracy, in contrast to Egypt, where the military is back in charge. Yet many young Tunisians remain deeply dissatisfied with the state of domestic life. Millions still contend with the same struggles that catalyzed their revolutionary movement -- a stark shortage of jobs, brazen corruption, and a sense that the economic spoils tilt toward a well-connected few. Some have become so embittered that they are joining the cause of rebels fighting next door in Syria.
In short, the same discontent that provoked the Arab Spring in the very nation of its beginning now appears to be fueling the rise of regional Islamist extremism, adding fresh recruits to the bloody war in neighboring Syria.
"By monitoring jihadist media, it's clear that Tunisian nationals compose one of the largest portions of foreign fighters in Syria, on par with Libya but perhaps eclipsed by Saudi [Arabia]," says Charles Lister, a Syria expert and visiting fellow at the Brookings Doha Center.
No one really knows how many Tunisians are fighting in Syria, or how many have died there, but nearly 200 have been publicly reported as killed in combat so far, Lister says.
Ikbel says his brother first crossed the border to Libya, where he took part in combat training, a sort of crash course to insurgency. He then flew from Benghazi to Turkey, where he pretended to be a tourist at the airport in Istanbul. From there, he drove to southeast Turkey -- a hub for both Syrian refugees fleeing bloodshed and Syrian rebels -- and snuck across the border into Syria. He followed a well-beaten path taken by many Tunisian men before him.
A brother of one of the 43 men who made headlines in Tunisia last year after being captured with rebels in Syria and sent to a regime prison spoke to The WorldPost on condition of anonymity. He says his "normal, open-minded" 28-year-old brother traveled to Libya in March 2012, telling his family he was going for work, when in reality he was training with other jihadists. He was ultimately arrested while fighting in Damascus.
"We tried everything to get him back," the brother said, with an air of defeat. Unlike Ikbel's story of hope, he knows his brother may never make it home.