Allied Democratic Forces: ISIS’s bloody newborn in Africa
The Allied Democratic Forces (ADF),
a rebel group in the Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda, has become the
most loyal group to the terrorist organization ISIS.
The emerging newborn in Africa, on
which ISIS depends to control the continent, is one of the most active and
violent armed groups in central Africa, where the group was responsible for the
killing of hundreds during recent years, which prompted the United States to issue
several warnings of the expansion of ISIS in Africa through this group.
Foundation
The Allied Democratic Forces was
established in 1995 from groups hostile to Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni,
seeking to overthrow the government, defend the rights of the Tablighi Jamaat,
and establish an Islamic state there. They were originally based in western
Uganda, but they were also active in border areas between Uganda and the Congo
and then expanded into the neighboring Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).
The ADF is stationed in the border
areas between Congo and Uganda, choosing these areas due to the ideal terrain
in the Rwenzori Mountains, as well as the forests and bushes near Lakes Albert
and Edward, which are difficult for government forces to access but easy for
its elements to establish bases and recruit fighters, in addition to the ethnic
presence that rejects the central government in these areas, especially the
Nandi ethnicity.
Over the course of the decades-long
conflict, the ADF did not show any commitment to its original goal of
establishing an Islamic state, with the exception of its use of the term
“tawhid” (monotheism), while there were media reports about a desire to change
its name. Since 2012, the group has used the name “the City of Monotheism and
Monotheists” in its publications.
Affiliation
with ISIS
In February 2018, the Congolese
forces said that they had found materials and books belonging to ISIS in the
possession of ADF fighters in the Beni region in the east of the country, where
funds were paid by ISIS financial facilitator Waleed Ahmed Zain, who was
arrested in Kenya in July 2018, at least once to the ADF between early 2017 and
June 2018.
In
conjunction with what was said about ISIS’s payment of these funds, the ADF
began thinking about changing the movement’s name to “the City of Monotheism
and Monotheists,” according to intelligence reports. However, it also has its
own means of financing through cutting trees, exporting timber, extracting gold
and trading in ivory, in addition to a network of taxis and motorbikes
operating between Butembo, Beni and Oicha.
According to observers, it is
unclear whether the ADF receives orders directly from the leaders of ISIS or
act more independently, stressing at the same time that these terrorist
militias have adopted some brutal tactics that appeared for the first time by
ISIS during the period of the latter’s control over large parts of Iraq and
Syria.
Expansion in
Africa
Terrorist attacks in the Congo
recently showed the extent of the expansion of ISIS throughout Africa, as 15
civilians were killed on Thursday, December 23, in attacks launched by the ADF
in northeastern DRC, while 38 militants were killed in battles with the army.
Janvier MusukeKenyongo, a local
official in the Congo, confirmed that three civilians were killed on Saturday,
December 25, in an attack by this terrorist group on Ngaybanda, a village in
Ituri province, saying, “Terrorists are roaming the area. Two days ago, we
buried nine people they killed,” according to AFP.
According to a report by the
Washington Times, Katherine Zimmerman, a resident fellow at the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI) who tracks fundamentalist terrorism in Africa,
confirmed that the consistent activity of ISIS across Africa reflects the
movements of al-Qaeda and its affiliate groups, including the Somali terrorist
movement Al-Shabaab, where both networks pose direct threats to the West,
especially Europe, pointing out that there should be a stance by the United
States and its allies because of the way in which the terrorist threat has
developed on a global level.
During the summer of 2021, the ADF
posted several videos online of hostage beheadings and carried out several car
bomb attacks, as well as at least two suicide bombings, including a recent attack
in Beni during the holidays. It has also killed hundreds across the Congo and
displaced at least 140,000 of the country's citizens, according to data
compiled by the Counter Extremism Project, the Washington Times reported.