AF-SOOMAALI

Why young mid­west­ern So­ma­lis try to join Is­lamic State


ON May 3rd two Mus­lim men with ri­fles at­tacked a se­cu­rity guard at a venue in Texas show­ing car­toons of the Prophet Muham­mad. Both were shot dead be­fore they killed any­one—they were in­com­pe­tent ter­ror­ists, for­tu­nately. The Is­lamic State claimed re­spon­si­bil­ity for the at­tack. There is no ev­i­dence that it had any di­rect in­volve­ment, but the gun­men may have been in­spired by the global ji­hadist move­ment. One of them, El­ton Simp­son, was ques­tioned by the FBI in 2010 and later con­victed of ly­ing to them. He de­nied that he had made plans to go to So­ma­lia and be­come a ji­hadist, when in fact he had.

For Richard Stanek, sher­iff of Hen­nepin County, Min­nesota (which cov­ers most of Min­neapo­lis), the story is all too fa­mil­iar. For eight years he has been search­ing for the “magic trick” to stop young men from join­ing Is­lamic ex­trem­ists, es­pe­cially in So­ma­lia. He has been called as an ex­pert wit­ness be­fore Con­gress and shared his in­sights with of­fi­cials from 38 coun­tries.

Since the 1990s more than 100,000 So­ma­lis have come to Amer­ica as refugees. Many set­tled in the Min­neapo­lis-St Paul area, which to­day is home to around 75,000 im­mi­grants from So­ma­lia and their chil­dren. The Cedar-River­side neigh­bour­hood in the Twin Cities is some­times called “Lit­tle Mo­gadishu”. Af­ter they ar­rived, So­ma­lis clus­tered and kept to them­selves; many in­tended to re­turn home as soon as the civil war was over. So­mali women made lit­tle ef­fort to learn Eng­lish.

Since Mr Stanek be­came sher­iff in 2007, sev­eral dozen young So­mali-Amer­i­can men from Min­nesota have dis­ap­peared to join the Shabab, a group of Is­lamist fight­ers in So­ma­lia linked to al-Qaeda. But “It re­ally hit home in 2009, when Shirwa Ahmed blew him­self up out­side of Mo­gadishu,” the sher­iff says. Ahmed was the first known Amer­i­can sui­cide-bomber—and a grad­u­ate of a Min­neapo­lis high school.

Over the past two years the dan­ger has in­creased, as young So­mali men, and some young women, at­tempt to join Is­lamic State (IS) rather than the Shabab. Yet Mr Stanek feels more con­fi­dent. His re­la­tion­ship with the So­mali com­mu­nity has much im­proved. He has made friends with a lo­cal imam, hired Hais­san Hus­sein to be the first So­mali deputy sher­iff in Min­nesota, and cre­ated a six-mem­ber team to build “com­mu­ni­ties of trust” with Hen­nepin Coun­ty’s many cul­tures. The team in­cludes Abdi Mo­hamed, a So­mali who im­mi­grated in the 1990s, whose full-time job is to li­aise with So­ma­lis. And Min­neapo­lis has be­come one of three pi­lot cities for Coun­ter­ing Vi­o­lent Ex­trem­ism (CVE), an ini­tia­tive by the Obama ad­min­is­tra­tion un­der which po­lice try to con­nect with Mus­lim groups through lo­cal events, men­tor­ing and youth pro­grammes.

These closer con­tacts, says Mr Stanek, are the rea­son why fed­eral au­thor­i­ties know much more about the six young So­ma­lis from Min­nesota who were ar­rested try­ing to ob­tain false pass­ports and were charged on April 19th with try­ing to leave Amer­ica to join IS. That suc­cess, he says, is proof that many of the par­ents of young­sters who are at risk re­alise that their in­ter­ests are aligned with those of the po­lice. Even so, ac­cord­ing to Andy Luger, the top fed­eral pros­e­cu­tor in Min­nesota, re­cruit­ment for ter­ror and ji­had re­mains a par­tic­u­lar prob­lem in the state.

On a sunny morn­ing this week, Mr Mo­hamed, Mr Stanek’s li­ai­son of­fi­cer, walked into a Star­bucks café in Se­ward, an­other neigh­bour­hood where many So­ma­lis live, and was warmly greeted by an all-male So­mali clien­tele sip­ping cof­fee. He sat down with Yusuf, who came to Min­neapo­lis in 2003 and works in a chem­istry lab as well as men­tor­ing chil­dren af­ter school. “One prob­lem is the gen­er­a­tional gap be­tween par­ents and chil­dren,” says Yusuf. The cul­ture and iden­tity of home and the out­side world don’t fit to­gether. An­other prob­lem is ab­sent fa­thers, ei­ther not around at all or work­ing so hard to make ends meet that they are hardly ever home.

So­ma­lis are one of the most trou­bled groups of im­mi­grants. Many young So­mali men are in prison; many So­ma­lis of both sexes drop out of high school. Un­em­ploy­ment hov­ers around 21%, the high­est of Min­neso­ta’s five largest im­mi­grant groups. More than half of Min­neso­ta’s So­ma­lis are poor. Many are iso­lated from other im­mi­grants and even from other Mus­lims, who find them prickly, proud and stand­off­ish.

No clear pat­tern of IS re­cruit­ing in Min­nesota can be dis­cerned. The six who were re­cently ar­rested were largely self-rad­i­calised through the in­ter­net or lured by “peer-to-peer” re­cruit­ing: a process by which friends per­suade friends to join a ter­ror­ist group, com­pare notes on how to raise money for a flight, and make con­nec­tions with mid­dle­men in Turkey. One of the young men, Guled Ali Omar, was the brother of a would-be ji­hadist who left for So­ma­lia in 2007 and re­mains a fugi­tive.

No mas­ter­mind re­cruiter seems to have been at work, though Abdi Nur, a young So­mali from Min­neapo­lis who joined IS last year and is now in Syria, seems to be woo­ing mid­west­ern ji­hadists. IS’s mil­i­tary suc­cess—it claims to have re­stored the old Caliphate—is prob­a­bly its most po­tent re­cruit­ing tool. Ayaan Hirsi Ali, a So­mali-born writer who was once a zealot but now cam­paigns for a lib­eral Is­lamic re­for­ma­tion, says she would prob­a­bly have joined IS, had it been around when she was young and im­pres­sion­able.

So­ma­lis feel tar­geted both by the ex­trem­ists, who lure away their chil­dren, and by non-Mus­lim Amer­i­cans, who sus­pect them of ter­ror­ism, says Jay­lani Hus­sein of the Coun­cil on Amer­i­can-Is­lamic Re­la­tions in Min­nesota. They are es­pe­cially fear­ful of CVE, which they think will amount to a gi­ant spy­ing op­er­a­tion cam­ou­flaged as so­cial ser­vices. Mr Stanek agrees that “coun­ter­ing vi­o­lent ex­trem­ism” sounds con­fronta­tional—but he would hap­pily take the promised fed­eral funds and ex­pand his com­mu­nity-en­gage­ment team from six mem­bers to twelve.

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