ISIS using Covid-19 pandemic to draw in recruits in Philippines
The Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) uses the Covid-19 pandemic in the Philippines to draw in new recruits.
ISIS does this in an
attempt to expand its activities in the Asian country, three years after it
controlled Marawi city in the southern part of the Philippines.
According to local
authorities in the city, ISIS uses the city's quarantine to mobilize poor and
deprived youth against the government.
ISIS also uses the same
conditions to recruit youth, the authorities said.
Rommel Banlaoi, the
head of the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and Terrorism Research,
said ISIS maintained its activities despite the strict lockdown imposed by
Philippine authorities throughout the country because of the Covid-19 pandemic.
Nevertheless, Banlaoi
said the pandemic had slowed down the entry of jihadists into the Philippines
from other countries.
ISIS, he said, uses the
pandemic to justify its attacks.
He added that the
terrorist organization also uses the lockdown in recruiting new members.
Banlaoi noted that the
recruitment activities of ISIS are most concentrated in rural areas where the
effects of the pandemic and the lockdown are most acute.
Around 59 foreign
militants had entered the Philippines in an illegal manner since 2019,
according to data released by the Philippine Institute for Peace, Violence and
Terrorism Research.
It said these militants
were given support by factions loyal to ISIS in Mindanao
in the southern part of the Philippines.
These militants, the
center said, consider the Philippines to be the "new land of jihad".



