Joining ISIS: How would you stop radicalization in your community?
Home-grown terror: Small groups of young Canadians across the country are being attracted to the Siren call of ISIS ...first young men and now young women too. What is the attraction, can it be prevented?
How would you stop radicalization in your community? With guest host Suhana Meharchand
GUESTS & LINKS
TWITTER & EMAIL
DOWNLOAD MP3 (right click, choose 'Save Target/Link As')
INTRODUCTION
On Parliament Hill this week many MPs were subdued as they re-lived moments in last October's attack on the Hill. The cellphone video message of the shooter Michael Zehaf-Bibeau revealed that he was at least partly if not wholly motivated by ideas of radical Jihad. Such ideas are hard to miss these days. They are frequently in news stories, and in many discussions of public policy today. Just a click of the mouse can easily bring up more graphic images and videos.
The al Qaeda offshoot, ISIS, as well as waging a blood-soaked path across Syria and Iraq, has shown itself to be very adept at getting out its message of religious war both online and through social media: websites with videos and music, streams of Twitter messages, online magazines, all appealing to others to join the glory of the battle.
That message is proving to be seductive to small groups of young people around the world. Many from Western countries have abandoned their comfortable lives to heed the call to battle overseas. Canada has produced substantially more young fighters per capita than the United States. It's just one of many mysteries in trying to understand why and how some young people become radicalized and get caught up in such extreme goals.
Some experts say that if those home-grown fighters don't get killed overseas they will likely return to target Canadians at home. In both recent cases, the shooting on Parliament Hill and the motor-killing of the soldier in Quebec, the perpetrators had been refused foreign travel.
Polls suggest Canadians are more concerned about the threat of terrorism than before. But whether you view the threat as being imminent or a long shot, how do you discourage the small numbers of young people who are being drawn into the world of such extreme ideas? The numbers may be small but the potential for disruption could be much greater.
We'd like to hear your views.
How do we combat home-grown terrorism? With tougher laws, more police powers and more surveillance? Do we commit to greater vigilence within our communities? How do we identify those at risk? Who should get involved, parents, schools, friends, religious groups, the police?
Our topic today: "Joining ISIS: how would you stop radicalization in your community?"
I'm Suhana Meharchand ...on CBC Radio One ...and on Sirius XM, satellite radio channel 169 ...this is Cross Country Checkup.
GUESTS
Jeff Wyers
Security researcher with Waterloo, Ontario-based intelligence group iBRABO.
Mohammad Robert Heft
Community leader and outreach liaison for the R.C.M.P. working to de-radicalize youth.
Twitter: @robertheft
Alia Hogben
Social worker and Executive Director of the Canadian Council of Muslim Women.
Imam Syed Soharwardy
Founder of the Islamic Supreme Council of Canada and Muslims Against Terrorism.
Twitter: @syedsoharwardy
LINKS
CBC.ca
- Michael Zehaf-Bibeau warns in video: 'You gotta be careful'
- Ottawa's de-radicalization focus much too narrow, reformed skinhead says
- Terrorism survey: 50% of Canadians feel less safe than 2 years ago
- Parliament Hill shooter Zehaf-Bibeau's cellphone manifesto barely a minute long, by Chris Hall
- Al-Shabaab threats cause cheerleading teams to pull out of West Edmonton Mall event
- Tim Uppal defends use of West Edmonton Mall threat video in Conservative Facebook post
- Muslim Canadians worry about effects of anti-terror talk
- Man accused of plotting train attack offers advice to jurors
- Mother of dead Canadian jihadi launches de-radicalization effort
- Video: The National - Andrew Poulin's influence, Timmins, Ont. born extremist recruited five Toronto men for ISIS
- Video: The National - Are We Safe? | Our Canada - From global security threats to individuals on the street are we safe in Canada? Adrienne Arsenault looks for answers.
- Anti-radicalization workshop in Winnipeg focuses on families
Globe and Mail
- Ottawa shooter in video: 'You are not even safe in your own land'
- Six Montreal students suspected of travelling to Middle East to join Islamic State
- Canada to combat jihadist recruiters with own social media campaign
- What drives Islamic State fangirls, by Margaret Wente
- A radical approach to extremism: Keep them in school, by Doug Saunders
- Obama's 'college seminar' no way to lead the fight against extremism, by Derek Burney and Fen Osler Hampson
- Obama appeals to Muslims for support, as Ottawa calls out radical Islam
- Voices of reason fight to be heard in IS online propaganda war, by Omar El Akkad
- Britain aims to stem flow of Islamic State youth recruits
- British intelligence had early encounter with 'Jihadi John'
- Charities that funded activist group that tried to help Jihadi John under pressure in UK
- We have to break the cycle of extremism and backlash, by Sheema Khan
- Why a media war against Islamic State is good strategy, by George Petrolekas
National Post
- Zehaf-Bibeau said Parliament Hill attack was 'retaliation' for military missions in Afghanistan and Iraq
- Zehaf-Bibeau martyrdom video will be of more value to politcians than terrorist groups, by Graeme Hamilton
- Video proves Harper right about terror threat, but voters have other worries, by John Ivison
- Finance Minister Joe Oliver says 'more can be done' to disrupt terrorist financing, requests investigation
- Three days before October terror attacks, alarm bells were sounding, intelligence documents show
- Stop ISIS atrocities by cutting off their cash flow, agency urges countries
- ISIS sympathizer's road to jihad — from Canada to Syria to Iraq — tracked one Tweet at a time
- ISIS spokesman calls for more Ottawa-style attacks in Canada, warning 'what lies ahead will be worse'
- Al Qaeda official who claimed responsibility for Charlie Hebdo attack calls for 'lone wolf' terror in Canada
- The threat behind our bars, by John Muise
- Radicalized youth making pit-stops to earn cash in oil-sands before joining extremist groups such as ISIS: chief
- Canadian extremists paying the price, with six reported dead over the past two months
- Canadian appears in terror group's propaganda video two years after being killed in Somalia
- Paris terror attacks highlight problem of how to deal with returning jihadists
- Ottawa 'closely monitoring' as video repeats ISIS calls for Canada attacks