A growing number of "disillusioned" Islamic State (ISIS) fighters are
defecting from the jihadist group and could be used by governments to
deter potential recruits, a report published on Monday said.
At
least 58 people have left the group and publicly spoken about their
defection since January 2014, according to the report by the
International Centre for the Study of Radicalisation and Political
Violence (ISCR) at King's College London.
The study said that 17
fighters were reported to have defected in June, July and August alone,
adding that they represent only a "small fraction" of former fighters,
with many too scared to come forward.
The ISCR called on
governments to make it easier for defectors to speak out, without the
threat of prosecution, as a deterrent to others.
Those
who told their stories overwhelmingly said they were disaffected by the
killing of fellow Sunni
Muslims, including innocent civilians, and the
group's failure to confront the regime of President Bashar Assad.
"The defectors' voices are strong and clear: 'ISIS is not protecting Muslims. It is killing them,'" the report said.
One
defector, identified as Ebrahim B, from Germany, claimed to speak for
two dozen of his comrades who travelled to Syria to fight Assad only to
be disappointed by the reality on the ground.
"Muslims are fighting Muslims. Assad's forgotten about. The whole jihad was turned upside down," the report cited him as saying.
IS
leaders consider the Free Syrian Army, Ahrar al-Sham, and al-Qaeda
affiliate Jabhat al-Nusra as enemies and have engaged in "vicious
battles" with all of them, according to the report.
But many
defectors argued that fighting other Sunni groups was "wrong,
counter-productive and religiously illegitimate", it said, adding that
this "was not the kind of jihad they had come to Syria and Iraq to
fight."
Complex and dangerous
The defectors
mentioned in the report were permanent residents of 17 countries,
including nine from Western Europe and Australia.
Dozens of
defectors have fled to Turkey while others have reportedly been executed
as "spies" or "traitors" by ISIS, which considers defection as
apostasy.
Leaving the group is "complex and dangerous", the report said, with many forced to go into hiding, fearing prosecution.
"Many
are still trapped inside Syria or Iraq - unable to escape an
organization that they no longer feel any allegiance for," the report
added.
The ISCR is calling on governments to "recognize the value
and credibility of defector narratives" and to ensure the safety of
those who speak out, as well as remove the "legal disincentives".
While
acknowledging that some defectors are "likely to have committed
crimes", it believes their testimonies could deter others from joining
ISIS.
The report also shed light on reasons why people join the
group, the most common being the atrocities committed by Assad's
government in Syria.
It said many also believed ISIS represented a "perfect Islamic State".
Some
were lured by promises of food, luxury goods, cars and having their
debts paid off - promises which rarely came to fruition.
Monday, September 21, 2015
ISIS defectors disillusioned with killing Muslims
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