Oct 21, 2013, 7:34 PM

Spike of Western, Caucasus jihadists enter Syria: Report

Spike of Western, Caucasus jihadists enter Syria: Report

TEHRAN, Oct. 21 (MNA) – Fresh groups of jihadists are travelling from Chechnya to Syria; two transit points have been identified in Europe, reports Le Monde.

France’s intelligence service reported a significant spike in the number of jihadists who travelled to Syria to fight against President Bashar Assad’s regime, according to a report in the daily Le Monde.

The report on Wednesday stated that jihadists from Western and Caucasus countries vastly increased the number of entry points into to Syria since the summer. It said that the civil war represents a “power of attraction” for radical Islamists.

“Nothing like it has ever been seen before, even for Afghanistan,” said a senior French intelligence official.

Schindler, a leading US expert on counterterrorism, wrote based on Le Monde’s report, “France is a major source, with the number of French nationals in Syria having doubled just since May, with some 400 in various forms of transit and over 200 actually in Syria as of the beginning of October.”

Fresh groups of jihadists are travelling from Chechnya to Syria. Two transit points have been identified in Europe.

Austria’s capital, Vienna, has served as a major transit hub for Caucasus jihadists who work their way from the central European country to Turkey and into Syria. According to French intelligence, Chechen Islamists are using Nice, where there is a Chechen community of more than 10,000 in southern France to travel to Turkey and into Syria.

An al-Qaida member affiliated with the ISIS group from Iraq used the Turkish city of Gaziantep in late September as an entry point into Syria.

Le Monde reported that radical Islamists from Australia and Canada have left for Syria. Smaller numbers of jihadists have departed from Italy and Luxembourg.

French intelligence said there is a demographic change in the age brackets of the fighters. Lately, fighters between 20 and 35 are streaming into Syria in contrast to the spring when there were large numbers of teenagers and middle aged men in their fifties.

Source: Al-Alam
MNA
END

News ID 56960

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