Tricked into joining terror group: how militias are recruiting Iraqi youth
Ahmed Muayed
uruknet.info
Extremist militias like the dangerous League of Righteous are luring new recruits by offering loans and jobs. At first, the recruits don't have to do anything but then the young men find themselves training with weapons in Iran. Some observers believe these underhand tactics will only increase as Iraq's security situation deteriorates.
Extremist militias like the dangerous League of Righteous are luring new recruits by offering loans and jobs. At first, the recruits don't have to do anything but then the young men find themselves training with weapons in Iran. Some observers believe these underhand tactics will only increase as Iraq's security situation deteriorates.
When young Baghdad man, Mahdi Mohsen, badly needed a loan,
one of his neighbours offered him money. The unemployed man took the
money, not realising how it would change his life.
"He used to give me lots of money," Mohsen told NIQASH.
"At some point he gave me US$1,000 in return for doing a few little
jobs, like cleaning a place or organising goods stored in an office."
Mohsen had been unable to find a job and Abdul-Hussein
al-Kanani helped him out with some cash. Then after several months,
al-Kanani suggested that instead of looking for a job, Mohsen could
start work for the League of Righteous;
the monthly salary would be US$400 and he wouldn’t have to do much.
That is significant in a country where the average wage is around US$500
a month.
Mohsen signed on and recently his wage even went up to
US$600 a month. However Mohsen doesn't care, he just wants to quit this
job. But he cannot. "I just want to wake up from this nightmare," he
says. "I don’t care about the money anymore or the new house I've
rented. I've got a lot of problems now because of who I am working for."
The mainly Shiite Muslim extremist group, the League of Righteous, is actually an offshoot of the Mahdi Army,
a large militia formed from the Sadrist movement, that was held
responsible for much of the violence against American troops after 2003
as well as conflicts that nearly plunged Iraq into a sectarian, civil
war. However over the years, the Sadrist movement has disarmed and, as a
political force, has become a crucial part of the current coalition
government; it has also been engaged in community work and now it even
seems to be becoming popular with Iraqis that did not previously support
it.
Meanwhile the League of the Righteous
is still an armed militia group and it has even clashed with the Mahdi
Army in recent times. In fact, leading Shiite Muslim cleric who heads
the Sadrists, Muqtada al-Sadr, has described League members as criminals
and murderers. Further afield, the League is designated a terrorist
organisation and it continues to be one of the most feared extremist
militant groups in Iraq.
Muntater al-Daraji has a similar story to tell about how
he was recruited to the League of the Righteous "I had family problems,"
he explains. "My mother died and my father remarried but my new
stepmother told us we had to leave the family home. I had nowhere to go
and I was just drifting between relatives' houses. The League offered me
a good job as a guard at one of their institutions, gave me a place to
live and a good salary. I couldn't really refuse."
Even on his first day of work, he received a gift of
US$1,500. "I realized straight away that doing this job was going to
have a big impact on my life and my reputation but I didn't really have a
choice," al-Daraji says.
Mohammed Raad, a former security officer, believes that
these kinds of recruitment incidents are just increasing because of the
deterioration in Iraq's security situation over the past few months.
"That deterioration has come as a result of groups like the League of
the Righteous and others stepping up their activities, making it clear
that they exist and that they have power," Raad said. "That's made these
groups increase their campaigns to mobilize local youth."
When NIQASH contacted officials in the League of Righteous
though, they refused to comment on whether they recruited young people
in underhand ways or not. They did deny that they were actively involved
in recruiting people at all. "We don't need any more members right
now," one of them said. "But maybe we'll need more in the future."
Another young man Fadel Rasoul says he was tricked into
working for the extremist militia. He's actually from a financially
stable family but one of his friends told him that if he joined up at
one of the League's offices, he would be paid US$300 per month for doing
nothing. Its a little like the kinds of outreach, or social welfare,
programmes, run by organizations like the Lebanese group Hezbollah.
"I went to their office and I filled out a form," Rasoul
explains. "I got the money for three months and I never did anything for
the organisation. Then one day an official at the same office called me
and told me to come and meet him. When I got there, to my surprise, I
was given an airplane ticket, US$1,000, a tourist visa for Iran and a
booking form for a four star hotel there, for ten days."
"Almost one month after I returned from what was basically
a tour, the same official asked me to go to Iran again. But this time
it was together with 17 other men and our group was accompanied by
League officials. When we arrived, we quickly figured out it wasn’t
holiday: it was an intensive military training session. It went on for
almost 15 days," Rasoul says. "I just couldn’t say no. So I participated
in the training course because I was very scared of what would happen
to me if I refused."
Upon returning from Iran, Rasoul went back to the office
and asked if he could give up membership of the organisation. He was
told that, "in this game, anyone who starts to play can't give up
easily". Which is why Rasoul is still a member of the League today.
And there are plenty of other young Iraqi men caught in
the financial traps set by extremist militias like the League of the
Righteous. "The mobilization of youth by the militias is ongoing - and
it never stops," local political analyst, Jafar Abdul-Ilah, told NIQASH.
"There are a number of reasons for this. Political conflicts, party
pluralism in the country's administration and the need that some parties
have for militias, to protect their interests. All of these mean that
young men will continue to be recruited."
Hani Ashour, a former adviser to the opposition Iraqiya
coalition, says there is one obvious way to solve this problem. The
government, he told NIQSH, needs to, "figure out how to end widespread
youth unemployment. That's just making it easy for militias and terror
groups to recruit young people. Weapons," he concluded, "should only
ever be in the hands of the Iraqi government."
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