
As a Melbourne teenager prepares to face court today charged over an alleged terrorist plot, Mamamia investigates the social media strategies used by ISIS to spread a rosy picture of life in the ‘caliphate’ — with the terrifying aim of recruiting young westerners.
On 17 February, three British schoolgirls told their parents they would be out all day, attending a wedding. Except that instead of attending a celebration, the girls — Amira Abase, 15, Kadiza Sultana,16, and Shamima Begum, 15– travelled to ISIS’s stronghold in Syria.
There in Raqqa, the teenagers are now thought to be living under the control of the radical group — and are expected to be married off themselves to ISIS fighters as ‘jihadi brides’.
Frighteningly, the teenagers are far from alone in their decision to flee a safe country for a war zone. They are just a handful of the hundreds of western women lured to the Middle East by ISIS’ masterful social media strategy. That strategy is specifically designed to recruit young women as brides, mothers, or members of the group’s all-female brigades, which patrol the streets to ensure civilian women’s compliance a strict form of Islamist morality.
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Given ISIS’s appalling treatment of women — the organisation has published guidelines on “how to rape” and is involved in sex trafficking and forced marriages — it’s hard to understand why any woman would want to join a group known to violently enforce extremely conservative gender roles.
But women now account for nearly one-fifth of all foreign fighters — a phenomenon attributed to ISIS recruiters being “very predatory and very targeted in going after young people,” as terror expert Professor Greg Barton from Monash University told Mamamia.