Role played by European intelligence agencies in keeping terrorists away from refugee camps
The ability of terrorists, masquerading as refugees, to sneak into refugee camps in European states is a serious problem facing intelligence agencies in these states.
Once inside
the camps, the terrorists try to recruit the refugees inside, capitalizing on
their tough living and economic conditions.
European
countries took measures to stop this, with some of these countries refusing to
receive refugees. Around 1.6 million refugees arrived in Europe between 2014
and 2016, according to the United Nations refugee agency.
The flow of
refugees into Europe has been scary to European governments and peoples. There
is belief among Europeans that an uninterrupted flow of refugees will lead to
the Islamization of the European continent. Some European governments also
found out that those perpetrating terrorist attacks in them arrived in their
countries as refugees.
Terrorists
seeping into refugee camps
Refugee camps
are present in around 125 states around the world. There is a general belief
that the refugee camps are there for a limited period of time. There is another
belief that the refugee camps are secure places.
Nonetheless,
the same camps can be a fertile soil for terrorism. A little less than half of
those present in refugee camps around the world are younger than 18 years old. These
are easy targets for terrorist organizations.
The fact that
most of the refugees have arrived from conflict zones, such as Syria, Iraq and
Afghanistan, makes the recruitment of these refugees a facile matter for
terrorist organizations. Most refugees are poor and suffer traumas related to
what they had been through in their countries.
Terrorist
groups also work hard to spread their ideas inside refugee camps, using
frustration among the refugees.
Terrorist
groups like Daesh capitalize on the fact that the refugees are unknown to
security agencies in which the refugee camps are located, according to a recent
study.
The presence
of poor security measures on the borders of European states also helped
terrorists to masquerade as refugees. Some refugees also use fake passports to
enter European countries. This accounts for the ability of a large number of terrorists
to enter these states. They pose as refugees and asylum-seekers.
In October
2018, Greek authorities traced 120 extremists who entered Greece as part of a
wave of refugees arriving in the country. Greek authorities succeeded in pinpointing
these extremists by listening to complaints from proper refugees about the
conduct of these 120 people.
On October 3,
2015, a Turkish ship, carrying 200 refugees, anchored on the coast of the Greek
island of Leros. Among the 200 refugees, there were two Daesh members who had
fake Syrian passports. The two Daesh members carried out an attack on a soccer
stadium in French capital Paris in November of the same year.
The same
Greek island received several terrorists who later staged attacks in different
areas in Europe. They included Abdelhamid Abaaoud, the mastermind of a series of
terrorist attacks in Paris in November 2015.
In January 2016, Europol said Daesh
had set up training camps in the Balkans, very close to Europe. The terrorist
organization, it said, prepared special combat forces to stage attacks in the
United Kingdom and other states. It added that the group can recruit refugees
and turn them into lone-wolves because of rampant desperation among the refugees.
German authorities referred, meanwhile, to 300 attempts by terrorist groups to
recruit refugees and turn them into fighters within their own ranks.
Intelligence agencies
pinpointing terrorists
Some European
states are now afraid to offer support to asylum-seekers, even those states
that signed the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees and the 1967
United Nations Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees.
European
intelligence agencies warned in the past months that Daesh's defeat in Syria
and Iraq would encourage it to ask its elements to infiltrate European
countries, especially among refugees arriving in these countries.
The Federal
Office for the Protection of the Constitution, the internal intelligence agency
in Germany, has been actively warning against the presence of terrorists among
refugees. In July 2017, the office referred to hundreds of attempts by Salafist
and Islamist groups to recruit refugees at refugee camps. It called on German
security agencies to formulate plans to stop these attempts.
Federal
Office for the Protection of the Constitution President
Hans-Georg Maassen said extremist Salafist groups use rampant frustration among
the refugees and their inability to be part of their new society in recruiting
those refugees.
This, he
said, was most clear in Bavaria and the North Rhine-Westphalia states. He added
that the Salafists attracted young people in the camps by collecting donations
for them.
Investigations
by the German intelligence showed that most of those who carried out attacks in
Germany were Arabs, especially from Syria. Some of these people, it said,
received training in Syria, before they entered Germany among refugees and
asylum-seekers as of 2015.
In April
2017, Germany authorities arrested a Syrian national in Bavaria, southern
Germany, on suspicions of recruiting refugees in a Greek refugee camp for the
sake of Islamist groups in Europe.
The German
intelligence also referred to a Muslim Brotherhood-affiliated NGO that operates
a mosque in Rastatt town in the Upper Rhine Plain. It said the NGO works to
infiltrate German states. The German intelligence added that the NGO has 13,000
members and has activities in almost all German states.
This is one
reason why the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution
maintains cooperation with the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees. The
latter notifies the former about refugees suspected to be extremists.
In September
2018, the German government revealed that the Federal Office for Migration and
Refugees had sent more than 10,000 alerts to the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution
about suspected asylum-seekers. It said in 2015, the office had sent 600 alerts
only.
Measures
If this says
anything, it says that European intelligence agencies are aware of the
successes terrorists scored in infiltrating European societies among refugees
and asylum-seekers. This raises questions about the action that should be taken
to prevent these terrorists from achieving their goals both in the short and
long run. European intelligence agencies took the following measures to do
this:
1 – Enlist help
from private security firms
Some European governments enlisted the
services of private security firms to guard refugee camps. The Austrian
government signed a contract with a private Swiss security firm to manage the
refugee camps in Austria. The same firm manages refugee camps in Switzerland.
Another private security firm manages the main refugee camps in Greece.
In Germany,
private security firms have more than 235,000 people working for them. These
private security workers acquire greater importance with the number of refugees
flowing to Germany exceeding a million in 2015. In the coming months and years,
European states are expected to enlist the services of more private security
firms to protect their own security and stability.
2 –
Reconsider border security measures
The ability
of terrorists to move freely between France and Belgium has stirred up debates
on the Schengen Agreement. This was why France and other states beefed up
security measures along their borders.
3 –
Communication with refugees
Some states
approached the refugees in order to get information about extremists who might
be hiding amongst them. The German domestic intelligence launched a hotline to
receive complaints from refugees about the presence of extremists in refugee
camps.
4 –
Reformulate refugee registration processes
Some European
governments upgraded refugee registration procedures to be more capable of
monitoring the movement of these refugees. The German intelligence agency
demanded an extra funding of 73 million Euros to monitor internet and social
media sites. The German media also revealed plans by the German intelligence to
eavesdrop on telecommunications.
5 –
Cooperation among intelligence agencies
European
intelligence agencies launched a virtual network for the exchange of
information and the coordination of intelligence activities. These efforts were
stepped up, especially after the Paris attacks.