BFF-14 Fears of new jihadist ‘academies’ as Iraqi jails fill up

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Fears of new jihadist ‘academies’ as Iraqi jails fill up

BAGHDAD, May 9, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – As Iraq tries thousands of locals and
foreigners accused of joining the Islamic State group, experts warn its jails
could once again become “academies” for jihadists.

Prison was a pivotal moment for many prominent jihadists — not least of
them Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, IS’s Iraqi supremo who remains at large despite
the collapse of his “caliphate” in March.

Baghdadi was held in Camp Bucca, a sprawling US-run complex in the
southern Iraqi desert, where he is thought to have essentially “come of age”
as a jihadist leader.

“For many members of such groups, prison was one of multiple ‘stages’ of
jihad,” said Hisham al-Hashemi, an expert in Iraqi jihadist movements.

They ran their own religious studies courses and even planned attacks on
civilians or ordered assassinations of security forces from within the prison
walls.

“The cells become the equivalent of academies — even if there’s just one
prisoner with extremist thoughts, he can recruit the rest,” Hashemi told AFP.

Iraq has already condemned hundreds of its own nationals as well as scores
of foreigners to life in prison for joining IS.

It has begun trial proceedings for another 900 Iraqis recently repatriated
from neighbouring Syria and has offered to try foreigners stuck in legal
limbo there, too.

– ‘Breeding grounds’ –

But its prison system is the subject of fierce criticism.

Advocacy groups accuse security forces of using circumstantial evidence to
detain people on terrorism charges, extracting confessions under torture and
keeping suspects in overcrowded cells with no access to lawyers.

Cells built to hold around 20 detainees are often packed with 50, a source
working in the jails told AFP, and prisoners are often caught smuggling
phones or passing on information during family visits, especially to their
wives.

Those arrested for petty crimes are often held with hardened jihadists,
which has facilitated recruitment in the past, said security analyst Fadel
Abu Raghif.

“Most of those detained were Islamic jurists and thinkers. They’re able to
argue, provide evidence, brainwash and persuade people,” he told AFP.

Those recruited in jail are typically not religiously orthodox to begin
with, but have instead been drawn by “rhetoric playing on a narrative of
oppression”, Abu Raghif added.

In the aftermath of Saddam Hussein’s toppling by US-led forces in 2003,
insurgent groups seized on the feeling of marginalisation among the country’s
Sunnis as fodder for recruitment.

More than fifteen years later, observers fear that same perception of
persecution is back.

The Soufan Center, a New York-based think tank, said Iraq “suppressed, but
never actually addressed” the grievances of its Sunni communities.

The deployment of the mostly-Shiite Hashed al-Shaabi paramilitary units in
Sunni-majority areas recaptured from IS “has fuelled sectarian resentment
among local populations”, the Center wrote this month.

That anger could pave the way for a repeat of the mid-2000s: “As happened
before with Camp Bucca, these detention centres are becoming breeding grounds
for radicalisation.”

– No repeat of Bucca –

Iraq’s government has declined to provide figures on detention centres or
prisoners, including how many are facing terrorism-related charges, although
some studies estimate 20,000 are being held for purported IS links.

Some facilities have shut down in recent years, including the Abu Ghraib
complex that became infamous for prisoner abuse during the US-led occupation.

Others were rocked by riots and prison breaks that allowed detainees
accused of “terrorism” to escape.

Now, with more repatriated fighters expected to arrive in the coming
months, observers fear an already-strained system will be flooded.

“The prisons that are being used definitely are insufficient in capacity
to hold potentially, thousands of extra people that will be transferred,”
warned Belkis Wille of Human Rights Watch.

HRW has called on the international community to help Iraq improve its
judicial processes and revamp its jails — but Iraq, Wille said, may have
something else in mind.

“The authorities are very conscious, and do not want something like Abu
Ghraib or Bucca to happen again,” she told AFP.

“It is a part of the reason why so many of the suspects are getting the
death penalty or life (in) prison. I think the intention is that these people
would not come out of prison, so you would not have the same dynamic.”

BSS/AFP/FI/ 0830 hrs