Some 2,838 foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria came from Belgium, Britain, France and Germany. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
THE
HAGUE - Around 4,000 Europeans have travelled to Syria and Iraq to join
extremist groups as foreign fighters, most from just four EU countries,
a new study released Friday said.
Of the estimated
3,922 to 4,294 foreign fighters from EU member states, some 2,838 came
from Belgium, Britain, France and Germany, said the International Centre
for Counter-Terrorism in The Hague.
Using data
supplied by 26 EU countries, the independent think-tank found that while
around 30 percent have since returned home, about 14 percent were
killed on the battlefield.
The centre also found that
there was "no clear-cut profile" of a foreign fighter. Some 17 percent
of the group were women, and up to 23 percent were converts to Islam.
More
than 90 percent come from large metropolitan areas, some from the same
neighbourhoods suggesting the "radicalisation process" is short and
"often involves circles of friends radicalising as a group and deciding
to leave jointly for Syria and Iraq."
The report --
complied before the March 22 attacks in Brussels -- reiterated that
Belgium has the highest number of foreign fighters per capita in the
European Union.
Between September 2014 and September
2015 there were reportedly some 30,000 foreign fighters in Iraq and
Syria from around 104 countries.
"Experts and
government officials have increasingly warned of the potential security
threat this phenomenon might also pose to Europe and beyond," the report
said.
It found that while European countries have
tightened national security and border controls, only nine have made it a
criminal offence to become a foreign fighter.
Few countries also have any kind of reintegration programme for those returning from the conflict areas.
And
the changing pattern of foreign fighters, including the radicalisation
of women as well as the very young, as well as those with possible
mental health issues "are not (yet) reflected in more targeted
policies."
The centre recommended that the EU should
set up an internal reporting system, saying there was "a clear need for
an effective (and centralised) monitoring and evaluation framework" to
analyse the impact of existing policies.
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Most EU jihadists come from 4 nations
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