A French journalist who was held hostage by Isis for 10 months has
spoken out against air strikes in Syria, saying they represent “a trap”
for Britain and other members of the international community.
Speaking in an interview with The Syria Campaign, Nicolas Henin put
forward his strategy for combatting the militant group – a no-fly zone
in opposition-held areas of Syria.
Mr Henin has previously spoken about how he was held for seven years
in Syria, and how British
national Mohammed Emwazi – known as Jihadi
John – was among the jailors who subjected him to physical and
psychological torture.
"Strikes on Isis are a trap,” he said.
“The winner of this war will not be the party that has the newest,
the most expensive or the most sophisticated weaponry, but the party
that manages to win over the people on its side.”
As an example of how the international community had responded well,
he described the recent escalation of the refugee crisis – and
corresponding offers from Europe of homes to fleeing Muslims – as “a
blow to Isis”.
He said: “Hundreds of thousands of refugees, fleeing this Muslim land
that is like a dream for Isis – that is supposed to be their Israel?
And fleeing that land to go to the land of the 'unbelievers'?
“This is why they probably tried to manipulate the public during the
Paris attacks,” he said. “To make us close our borders, and maybe even
more importantly, close our minds.”
Coalition bombing was not hurting the militants, Mr Henin said in the interview before British MPs voted in favour of RAF strikes in Syria, but rather “pushing people into the hands of Isis”.
“What we have to do – and this is really key – is we have to engage
the local people. As soon as the people have hope for a political
solution, the Islamic State will just collapse.
“There will be a very easy way to make Isis lose ground at a high
speed. The international community must decide all regions held by the
Syrian opposition are no-fly zones.
“No-fly zones for everybody. Not the coalition, not the Russians, not
the regime, nobody. Providing security for people [there] would be
devastating for Isis. That’s what the international community should
focus on.”
He added: "Why are we making so many mistakes? Why are people so misunderstanding [Isis’s] vision?
“We are just fuelling our enemies and fuelling the misery and disaster for the local people.”
Thursday, December 03, 2015
Nicolas Henin: Former Isis hostage says air strikes are a 'trap'
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