Visar inlägg med etikett tanzania. Visa alla inlägg
Visar inlägg med etikett tanzania. Visa alla inlägg

söndag, december 06, 2020

Kalifatet sprider sig till Tanzania

Kalifatet ISIS har i stort sett besegrats i både Syrien och Irak, men däremot fått fäste i nya områden runt om i världen. För tillfället tycks de största framgångarna vara i Afghanistan, Indonesien och Afrika.


 I Afrika tycks islamismens framgångar vara störst i nordliga Västafrika (ffa Nigeria, Kongo, Mali och det sahariska bältet) och Östafrika (Somalia, Kenya, Mozambique). Under de senaste månaderna har man snabbt expanderat in i Tanzania. Den fallfärdiga kommunistregimen i Sydafrika känner sig uppenbarligen hotad och stöder Frelimoregimen ekonomiskt och militärt.

Jamestown Foundation berättar om den första större islamisträden in i Tanzania: 

 

On October 15, Islamic State (IS) fighters in Mozambique staged their first claimed attack into southern Tanzania, killing at least 20 people in Kitaya, Mtwara Province. The fighters also burned down houses, destroyed an armored vehicle, and stole money and military equipment. Mtwara borders Palma district in the Mozambican Province of Cabo Delgado, which is the base of the group known as Ahlu al-Sunna Wal Jamaa or al-Shabaab (“The Youth”) locally but officially as Islamic State in Central Africa Province (ISCAP) (The Citizen, October 23; Club of Mozambique, October 20).

Some ISCAP members were initially followers of Kenyan Islamist ideologue, the late Aboud Rogo, and resettled in northern Mozambique after Rogo was killed extrajudicially in a drive-by shooting in Mombasa in 2012. ISCAP also has religious, commercial, and training ties with jihadist networks in Kenya, Tanzania, and elsewhere in East Africa (Club of Mozambique, June 14, 2018). The group, however, only started carrying out attacks in northern Mozambique in 2017 and has since killed an estimated 700 civilians. Like other Islamist militants in Africa, ISCAP demands that governments rule by sharia (Islamic Law) (The Africa Report, July 29).

Since IS’ ‘territorial caliphate’ in Syria and Iraq began collapsing, its leadership has been keen to expand in Africa. In August 2018, IS’ former “caliph,” Abubakar al-Baghdadi, indicated plans to create a Central Africa province (wilaya) (Twitter.com/SimNasr, August 22, 2018). Less than one year later, in April 2019, IS claimed an attack in Beni, Democratic People’s Republic of Congo (DRC), killing two soldiers and one civilian, which heralded the launch of ISCAP as a formal IS province (The East African, April 19, 2019). By that time, attacks were also intensifying in northern Mozambique, whose fighters, along with the DRC insurgents, soon became subsumed under ISCAP.

Islamic State’s Ambitions in Tanzania

ISCAP’s attack in southern Tanzania underlines IS’ ambition to expand its territory in Africa. While ISCAP has gained some success around Beni in DRC and Cabo Delgado in Mozambique, it has been slower to gain traction in Tanzania and Kenya, where, in contrast, al-Qaeda had success historically. In 2017, Tanzanian officials blamed an unidentified terrorist network for the killing of eight policemen in Kabiti district. Although the attackers had disappeared with the policemen’s guns, officials said the attackers were linked to another attack in Dar es Salaam, in which the gunmen stormed Sitakishari police station and stole 17 guns. Four policemen were killed in that attack. The police later said they had killed four suspects in connection with the murders of the policemen in Kabiti (The East African, April 22, 2017; African News, April 14,2017).

Therefore, with its first official attack claim in Tanzania, IS and ISCAP have scored a victory. Moreover, Tanzania’s police inspector general estimated at least 300 militants took part in the attack before they retreated to Mozambique. This attests to large numbers of fighters involved in the operation (The Citizen, October 23).

The jihadists gained access to Kitaya village after entering into Tanzania by sea and moving up Ruvuma River, which forms the border between Mozambique and Tanzania (Club of Mozambique,October 20). Photographs of the attack that IS released on its social media platforms and that were released outside official IS media channels further showed an attacker decapitating a man and throwing his head on the road as well as weapons and ammunition that the fighters pilfered (Club of Mozambique, October 20). In a video, the attackers were also heard speaking in Swahili, which is widely spoken in East Africa. They were also heard speaking Makua, which is a Bantu dialect in southern Tanzania and Mozambique, and Mwani, which is a Swahili dialect spoken in Cabo Delgado. This language diversity indicates northern Mozambique is a meeting point for East African jihadists from the Swahili Coast and perhaps elsewhere in East Africa (Club of Mozambique, October 20).

Nearly a month after the October attack, Tanzanian police announced the arrest of an unspecified number of Tanzanians suspected to be travelling to join ISCAP in Mozambique. The alleged recruits were from Kigoma in the west, Mwanza in the north, and other parts of Tanzania. After these arrests, the police said they had learned that many Tanzanians were involved in the attack in Mtwara and local villagers had helped ISCAP identify targets, including houses to set ablaze (Club of Mozambique, November 20).

Tanzanian Leadership’s Responses

ISCAP’s Mtwara attack occurred on the eve of Tanzania’s national elections, but information gathered from the videos indicates that the militants’ motivations were unrelated to the polls. According to utterances heard during the attack, the motive was to kill “what they [the militants] considered infidels,” and spread ISCAP’s teachings in Tanzania (Club of Mozambique, October 20). Incumbent president, John Pombe Magufuli, whose party is Chama Cha Mapindunzi (CCM), won the elections by receiving 84 percent of the vote. However, his main challenger, Tundu Lissu of the Party for Democracy and Development (CHADEMA), said the elections were riddled with irregularities, such as ballot-stuffing (Capital FM, October 29).

Ahead of Magufuli’s inauguration, key opposition figures were arrested and later released with no charges. A senior police officer in Dar es Salaam later said they would be charged with acts of terrorism and endangering national security (The Africa Report, November 5). These allegations were, however, not linked to the threat posed by ISCAP or any known violent threat.

In the past, Tanzania has frequently expressed its willingness to support global counter-terrorism efforts (Daily News, March 12). Tanzania is also aware of the threats posed by ISCAP. In May, the government sent troops to the border with Mozambique to bolster security after ISCAP escalated attacks on security forces and civilians in nearby Cabo Delgado (The Citizen, May 7). In August, Tanzania also carried out an operation on the border with Mozambique to flush out jihadists who were believed to be hiding in the forests there (Club of Mozambique, August 11).

 

 

torsdag, augusti 08, 2013

EID-EXTRA: Judiska tonåringar brända med syra

 
Två 18-åriga brittiska flickor överfölls
Town på Zanzibar.
Flickorna är judinnor från London, som
arbetar för en välgörenhetsorganisation
på ön. Katie Gee och Kristie Trup var
på väg till en restaurant för att äta middag
när två män på mopeder angrep dem och
slängde syra över dem. De uppges ha an-
gripits och slagits redan tidigare av en
islamistisk kvinna.
Flickorna fick brännskador i ansiktet, på
bröst, armar och ben. De har flugits till
sjukhus i Dar es Salaam, där läkarna uppger
att brännskadorna är "måttliga".
Enligt brittiska ambassaden kommer de att
flygas till London inom kort.
På Zanzibar, som är en helt muslimsk ö,
är islamismen under stark tillväxt.
Hittills har mest kristna attackerats. En katolsk
präst mördades tidigare i år och en annan
skadades. Flickorna är de första judar som har
överfallits.
Polisen hade redan tidigare fruktat hatbrott
riktade mot västerlänningar under Ramadan
och Eid.
Den islamistiske hatpredikanten Sheikh Issa
Ponda Issa är nu efterlyst för anstiftan till
överfallet.
**
Daily Telegraph:
"I think white good-looking north London
Jewish girls walking around in Zanzibar always
make them a target as it's a Muslim country. "
 
***
Bilden har inget samband med det aktuella
överfallet, utan föreställer fotomodellen Katie
Piper, som brändes med svavelsyra av  en
f d pojkvän 2008.




 
 

 
 
 

tisdag, oktober 09, 2012

Biskop: "Islamiseringen av Tanzania ökar lavinartat"

Trots att Tanzania är ett i grunden kristet land
utsätts religions- och yttrandefriheten för ett
allt starkare tryck från intoleranta muslimska
invandrare från grannländerna.
Man kräver bl a införande av sharialagstiftning,
även inom straffrätten..
**
“We see more and more itinerant preachers from
Saudi Arabia and Sudan entering this country –
and Muslims are increasingly making political
demands.”
These demands include extending Islamic
Sharia law and making everyone subject to it
– Muslim and non-Muslim alike.
Bishop Mfumbusa said: “In recent times there
has been a constant demand to introduce
Shari‘a into other parts of Tanzania which do
not have a majority of Muslims.”
Sharia law is already in force in Zanzibar,
a semi-autonomous archipelago with an
almost completely Muslim population,
but it does not apply to other parts of
the country.
**
The bishop said there were calls for Sharia,
which currently applies in areas of civil law
such as marriage and inheritance, to be
extended to cover criminal law.
“They claim that otherwise Muslims would
be able to avoid the law by claiming not to
be Muslim.
“To prevent this they say Sharia law must
be made applicable to everyone.”
(....)
Bishop Mfumbusa described how the influence
of radical Islam can be seen on the country’s
streets.
He said: “In many parts of the country more
veiled women than in the past can be seen,
among them small girls.”
The bishop added: “Verbal attacks are also
on the increase,” but stressed that to date
there had been no violent attacks in Kondoa
Diocese.
He said that education is not only being
radicalised but even Catholic schools can
face difficulties.
“In the church schools, which are also
attended by Muslim children, we must be
very sensitive and cautious to avoid any
undesirable incidents,” said Bishop Mfumbusa.
The number of madrassas – Qur’anic schools –
has also grown, with more extremist ones
encouraging pupils not to attend regular
schools, which is compulsory in Tanzania

måndag, oktober 27, 2008

Tanzania inför SHARIA

Tanzania, ett hittills i huvudsak kristet
land, kommer inom kort att införa sharia-
lagstiftning. Till att börja med gäller det
endast den muslimska minoriteten.
Provinsen Zanzibar har haft sharia-
domstolar sedan 1985.
Regeringen förväntas också snart ansöka
om medlemskap i OIC, den islamistiska
världsorganisationen.
***
Churches in Tanzania have petitioned against
a proposal to set up Kadhi (Islamic) courts to
handle disputes among the Muslim community.
They will create religious tension in a country
that prides itself on high levels of religious and
social tolerance, the church leaders say.
The petition was signed by 64 leaders from the
Christian Council of Tanzania (CCT) and
Pentecostal churches.
***