That Islamic State and other Jihadist groups fundamentally despise soccer was born out again recently with disclosure of IS’s plans to bomb football stadia in multiple countries and their public execution of four players of the Syrian city of Raqqa’s disbanded Al Shabab soccer team -- Osama Abu Kuwait, Ihsan Al Shuwaikh, Nehad Al Hussein and Ahmed Ahawakh. According to Dr James M Dorsey, a senior fellow at Nanyang Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore, an analysis of IS’s policies exposes a “convoluted love-hate relationship” with the World Game:
IF THE ISLAMIC STATE (IS) was serious about attacking Euro 2016, its plans clearly never materialized. Leaked transcripts of the interrogation of one of the attackers of Brussels Airport in March leave little doubt however that soccer figures prominently on the group’s target list. So does this month’s beheading in Raqqa of four Syrian players. Yet, what emerges from analysis of IS’s policies is a convoluted love-hate relationship with the world’s most widespread expression of popular culture.
IF THE ISLAMIC STATE (IS) was serious about attacking Euro 2016, its plans clearly never materialized. Leaked transcripts of the interrogation of one of the attackers of Brussels Airport in March leave little doubt however that soccer figures prominently on the group’s target list. So does this month’s beheading in Raqqa of four Syrian players. Yet, what emerges from analysis of IS’s policies is a convoluted love-hate relationship with the world’s most widespread expression of popular culture.
Mohammed Abrini, a Belgian of
Moroccan, descent, gained notoriety as the man with a white hat, after he was
seen walking away in an apparent snap decision not to commit suicide alongside
his two mates in the 22 March suicide attack at Brussels airport in which 34
people were killed.
Targeting stadiums
In testimony, following his arrest
at the end of a two-week manhunt, Mr. Abrini admitted, according to a just
leaked transcript of his
interrogation, that
he had taken pictures on a visit to Britain of Manchester United FC’s Old
Trafford stadium.
Earlier reports said that
authorities had also found pictures of Aston Villa FC’s
stadium in
Birmingham alongside images of the city’s Bullring shopping centre and the
recently revamped Birmingham New Street train station on Mr. Abrini’s cell
phone.
Despite being part of an IS cell
believed to be responsible for targeting Paris’ Stade de France in November
2015 in a wave of attacks that left at least 130 people dead, Mr. Abrini
insisted in his interrogation that his pictures did not constitute part of a
reconnaissance mission.
Mr. Abrini reportedly also told
Belgian police that his cell had
originally planned to attack this month’s Euro 2016 tournament in France but had opted for Brussels
airport because it feared that authorities were closing in on it in the wake of
the Paris attacks.
Often fervent fans
With little is publicly known about
Mr. Abrini’s life, it is unclear to what degree he was passionate about soccer.
However, Mr. Abrini’s apparent interest in soccer mirrors a pattern among
militant Islamist and jihadist leaders, including self-declared IS caliph
Ibrahim Bin Awad Alqarshi aka Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and foot folk.
They are and even
former players who nonetheless do not shirk from targeting local games in a
geography stretching from Iraq to Nigeria as well as big ticket European and
World Cup matches whose live broadcasts hold out the promise of a worldwide
audience.
An online review
conducted in 2014 by Vocativ
of jihadist and militant Islamist Facebook pages showed that their owners often
were soccer fans.
In fact, nowhere is the jihadists’
convoluted love-hate relationship with soccer more evident than in the
contradictory policies of IS. IS is notorious for its targeting of soccer fans,
including the execution early last
year of 13 teenagers because
they had watch an Asian Cup match between Iraq and Jordan on television.
Crowds in IS’ Syrian capital of
Raqqa were forced earlier this week to attend the public execution of
four players of the
city’s disbanded Al Shabab SC soccer team -- Osama Abu Kuwait, Ihsan Al
Shuwaikh, Nehad Al Hussein and Ahmed Ahawakh -- on charges that they had been
spies for the People's Protection Units (YPG), the Syrian Kurdish militia that
is in the frontline of confronting IS on the ground in Syria.
In both the cases of the teenagers
and the players it remains unclear whether soccer was the sole or primary
reason for their executions. What is clear however is that while IS
ideologically condemns the sport as an infidel invention designed to distract the
faithful from their religious obligations, it has yet to announce a unified
policy towards soccer or apply existing rules uniformly across all territories
in Iraq and Syria that it still controls.
Islamic State opportunism
Multiple stadiums in
cities and towns in Iraqi territory north
of Baghdad have been targeted by IS in recent years. Various soccer matches in
Europe in the immediate wake of last November’s Paris attacks were cancelled
because of perceived threats by IS.
IS has never formalized its banning
of soccer but the group propagates it on the streets of towns and cities it
controls and in mosques as well as public Internet access points where only
IS-sanctioned content can be accessed. In fact, Soccer was initially tolerated
in IS early days in Raqqa.
IS subsequently introduced an
informal ban. The ban’s enforcement is however inconsistent and contradictory.
The group has frequently requisitioned soccer fields for a variety of purposes,
including as shelters and car parks. Al Shabab’s Raqqa stadium is believed to
house the group’s police force.
New book: The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer |
Children have been seemingly
exempted from the ban and IS video clips show fighters in town square kicking a
ball with kids. Yet, the age limit appears to vary. In Manbij, a town near
Aleppo, children older than 12 are forbidden to play the game. In Raqqa and
Deir-ez-Zor in eastern Syria the age limit is believed to be 15.
Foreign fighters have similarly been
allowed to own decoders for sports channels and watch matches in the privacy of
their homes
IS, moreover, seemingly randomly, at
times allows the public to watch international matches and at others cracks
down on those following a match on television. IS raids cafes that broadcast
games without permission, frequently beating their patrons.
The group authorized the showing of
the FC Barcelona and Real Madrid derby a week after the Paris attacks, but at
kick-off rescinded the permission and closed down cafes and venues broadcasting
the match because of a minute’s silence at the beginning of the game in the
Madrid stadium in honour of the victims of the attacks in the French capital.
“IS policy towards soccer is driven
by opportunism and impulse. The group fundamentally despises the game, yet
can’t deny that it is popular in its ranks and in territory it governs,” said a
former Raqqa resident.
Dr
James M Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International
Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture,
and the author of The
Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog and a just published book with the same title.
See also: Terrorist images on football video upsets clerics (28 Apr 2007); Football's role as a "recruitment tool for terrorism" (6 June 2006); Al-Qaeda group plots poisoning English football (26 Mar 2006); Malaysian terrorist "was a Manchester United fan" (11 Nov 2005); Could football have lead OBL to an early asylum? (30 Sep 2005)