The role of women inside the terrorist organizaftions

The use of female elements by terrorist
organizations has stirred controversy. This is contrary to the legendary vision
of the organization set up by Abdullah Azzam and followed by his disciple Osama
bin Laden, who rejects women's participation in jihadist acts and restricts
their role on the domestic and household matters.
However, the difficulty of confrontations and the
vicissitudes of the events faced by terrorist organizations in various parts of
the world led them to change that vision, to integrate women into jihadist
activities and to carry out terrorist operations, especially in defensive
situations.
Chechen incursions to
integrate women into jihadist operations:
The Black Widows, is the first group affiliated to
the islamist streams that use women in its terrorist operations. It is a
Chechen group that began operations on June 7, 2000. Khava Barayeva and Luisa
Magomadova drove a truck full of explosives to the Russian special forces
headquarters in the village of Alkhan Yurt in Chechnya, killing two and
injuring five. Since then, women in Chechnya have carried out 81% of terrorist
operations (22 out of 27 operations carried out by women). Out of the 110 bomb
attacks, 47 were carried out by women, accounting for 43% of the operations.
Women in Al-Qaeda
organization :
Abdullah Yousuf Azzam, the leader of the Jihad in
Afghanistan and the godfather of Osama bin Laden, believes that the role of
women lies in housework rather than jihadism. Which is reflected in his message
to them, in which he warned them of luxury as he considers it as the enemy of
jihad and a damage to the human soul. Luxuries, with the education of
children Jihad, roughness, masculinity and heroism. He preached the women to be
satisfied with the necessities and to keep themselves away from the
luxuries.
The role of women in al-Qaeda's branches differed.
Bin Laden's al-Qaeda branch in Afghanistan was based on his teacher's views,
seeing women as having only a social and family role. Bin Laden did not address
any jihadist women's actions in his speeches.
However, the other branch of al-Qaeda in Iraq, led
by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, has contradicted Azzam's vision of women as a
jihadist. He has enlisted women in terrorist and suicide operations since 2005
and has made a big leap in recruiting women inside the organization.
Al-Qaeda has published several audio recordings
promoting the process of recruiting women into jihadist operations because of
what they described as "men's shackles,". The recordings including
the one of Mona Saleh al-Sharqawi through the website of "Voice of the
Jihad in the Arabian Peninsula", where she advised women not to wait for
men to support the religion of God because it is imposed on men and women.
This appears in the case of Sajida Mubarak
al-Rishawi, who moved from Iraq to the Jordanian capital of Amman to blow
herself up with her husband at a wedding party at the Radisson SAS in 2005. But
she failed in her mission, while her husband succeeded in detonating himself,
which killed 38 people, before she was being arrested. The organization sought
to exchange her with a Japanese prisoner in 2015 and with the Jordanian pilot
Moaz al-Kassasbeh in the same year. And she was executed in response to the
killing of Kassasbeh.
Daesh and women:
After the killing of Zarqawi in 2006, Abu Omar
al-Baghdadi took over the leadership of the organization before he was killed
in 2010. The organization witnessed dozens of jihadis joining his ranks. Where
the Um Salamah Battalion, formed in mid-2008, carried out operations in Diyala
and Baghdad.
With the death of Abu Omar al-Baghdadi, Ibrahim Awad
al-Badri, known as Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, assumed the leadership of al-Qaeda in
Iraq. And with the emergence of the so-called "Arab spring
revolutions" and the emergence of the organization's branch in Syria under
the name "Gabhet El Nosra", Baghdadi announced the conversion of the
name of al-Qaeda in the branch of Iraq to the organization of the Islamic state
«Daesh».
Daesh believes that women can play the same jihadist
role as men. The organization has issued numerous appeals to women in different
countries around the world to join the jihad in Syria and Iraq.
Which is a continuation of the same approach to
al-Qaeda in the Iraqi branch in dealing with women, where Alkhansa battalion
continued within the organization, Daesh also cares about the role of women
fighting alongside their domestic role, especially in periods of weakness.
Baghdadi was not enthusiastic about the idea of women's
jihad in the first, but with the decline of the organization's strength he
allowed them to intervene more.
According to a study by the King's College
International Center for the Study of Extremism, women are increasingly
involved in conflict zones around the world. The study notes that adult women
account for 11.4 percent of all foreign fighters in the ranks of the Islamic
state, with 4,761 women out of 41,490. While minor women representing 11.1% at
4,640, between April 2013 and June 2018.
It seems clear that the Islamic state organization
«Daesh», did not stop at the extent of attracting women from within the state
that it is fighting in, but it worked on the global level of its call for
women polarization and it succeeded in attracting hundreds of them from
different countries of the world.
The Islamic state managed to recruit four women in
France, but the French authorities managed to arrest them in September 2016,
before traveling to Syria, according to French Attorney General François
Moyens. They were placed on the list of terrorist threats. The husband of the
third defendant is accused of carrying out a terrorist operation in June of the
same year that killed two police officers.
In September 2016, the organization ordered dozens
of women to carry out suicide attacks against government forces as a final
attempt to defend the city of Mosul, capital of the Islamic State of Iraq, in
order to cover the lack of personnel within the organization.
In September 2016, a Syrian commander of the Islamic
state ordered a group of five French women to carry out a terrorist operation
in central Paris by detonating bombs, but the attempt failed.
The organization published a video in February of
2018, showing the female fighters in the organization in the first ranks
alongside the male fighters, during their battle along the Euphrates River,
this video is the first of its kind in this regard.
Houthis and women:
The Houthis are an armed religious movement
established by Badr al-Din al-Houthi. The movement was founded in 1992, and
they take the Zaydi sect as a religious reference.
The organization fought 6 wars against the regime of
Ali Abdullah Saleh, the former Yemeni president, between 2004 and 2010, before
the relationship between them became a friendship after the Yemeni uprising or
the so-called "Yemeni youth revolution", began its events on January
27, 2011.
The Houthis worked to exploit the economic, military
and social conditions in Yemen especially in the period following the Yemeni
uprising. In 2014, they began to control the regions and strongholds of
influence in northern Yemen. They continued their expansionist operations until
they managed to control Sana'a, before they announce the dissolution of the
state's institutions.
Which prompted President Abd Rabbo Mansour Hadi, the
current Yemeni president, to submit a request to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
for the purpose of military intervention and the formation of an Arab coalition
to confront the Huthis organization supported by Iran.
With the expansion of military operations by the
Huthis organization, and the strikes directed at the organization by the Yemeni
Popular Resistance Forces and the Arab Coalition led by Saudi Arabia, the
Huthis were forced to rely on recruiting women to participate in terrorist
operations carried out by the organization against the Yemeni people, Yemeni
territory.
With a direct order from «Abdul Malik al-Huthi» the
movement of Ansar Allah «Houthis» establish the Zinbiyat battalion
, the military arm of the organization. They formed the battalion before the
fall of the Yemeni capital Sana'a, specifically in September 2014 in the city
of Saada. Women inside the battalion wear normal clothes away from military
uniforms, with veils on their faces, which is widespread in Yemen.
The Houthis rely on the Zinbiyat to maintain
security, extend the regime within the Yemeni cities, and suppress the
anti-organized demonstrations inside Yemeni territory. This behavior has caused
discontent among the Yemeni people, who rely mainly on the tribal system. So
the fact that women have started carrying out military operations increased the
public anger towards the movement of Ansar Allah.
In 2014, the Zinbiyat took control of areas under
the control of the Houthis in Saada city, north of Yemen, after they were left
by the organization trying to take control of the Yemeni capital Sana'a and
assigned them the task of maintaining security in those areas. This is
considered the first operation that the Houthi Women's Organization carried
out.
On March 21, 2018, the Zinbiyat attacked
activists from the Popular Congress Party in front of the house of Ali Abdullah
Saleh. Where they gathered to demand the extradition of his body for burial on
the anniversary of his birthday, and they beat the Assistant Secretary-General
of the General People's Congress.
Boko Haram and women Jihad
The Boko Haram organization emerged in 2002 as a
religious group under the leadership of Sheikh Mohammed Yousef. It entered into
violent clashes with the security services in Nigeria from 2002 to 2009. 2009
was a crucial year for the organization. It declared its uprising against the
state during the period of the government of President Omar Musa Yar Udi. The
security forces faced this uprising by force, followed by the killing of its
founder, Mohammed Yousef, which sparked the anger of members of the
organization.
Boko Haram's organization cooperated with the
"Islamic State Organization" significantly, contributing to its
announcement of Boko Haram's pledge to Daesh and changing its name to the
"West African Islamic State". The organization also announced its
succession in Nigeria and the Lake Chad Basin in August 2014 .
In its war against the countries of the Lake Chad
basin, the Boko Haram organization adopted a female organization called the
Black Widows. Members of the organization appeared to have been influenced by
the activities of the Black Widows in Chechnya during the war with Russia. They
decided to repeat the name again in Nigeria.
The organization of the "black widows"
consists of a group of widows of terrorist organization leaders, women who are
influenced by organizational ideology and are working to blow themselves up in
densely populated areas or are used by the organization to transport explosives
because they are not inspected at security points.
Boko Haram began to use young girls in terrorist
operations in July 2014, when a suicide bomber was sent to the barracks of
Battalion 301 of the Nigerian Army in Combe State. The girl hid an explosive
charge she had placed under her hijab, resulting in her death and the death of
a soldier.
In May of 2017, three women suicide bombers carried
out a suicide attack with explosive belts, killing two people. The organization
continues to use women in its terrorist suicide attacks, especially those
carried out in mosques.
It is clear that terrorist organizations have
resorted to the increasing use of women in terrorist operations over time. Some
organizations, such as Boko Haram, have become dependent on women for most of
their operations because they have strategic advantages that allow them to
carry out such operations.