What’s gone wrong in Belgium?
The country has now been tied to all
three of the most recent major terrorist
attacks on European soil. The
Char lie Heb do killers got their guns
from Belgium; the ISIS-inspired Paris
attackers who slaughtered 130 people
in November plotted that massacre in
Belgium; and now, Belgian-born terrorists
have struck in their own country—killing
35 people and injuring more than 300 in
the capital, Brussels, last week. A toxic
combination of dysfunctional government,
mass immigration, and lax security
has allowed parts of this nation of just
11.2 million people to become hotbeds
of Islamic extremism, particularly the Brussels neighborhood of
Molenbeek. Security officials fear it’s just a matter of time before
Belgian terrorists launch their next assault—either in Belgium, or
only a short drive away in Paris, Frankfurt, or Amsterdam. “The
situation was left to rot too long,” says counterterrorism expert
Claude Moniquet, “and we let radical Islamists take control.”
How large is Belgium’s Muslim population?
There are about 640,000 Muslims living in the country—many
of them second- and third-generation descendants of Moroccan
and Turkish immigrants brought over as cheap labor in the 1960s.
Belgium has made little effort to assimilate these immigrants; the
country’s own national culture is fractured, with deep linguistic
and ideological divisions between its Dutch-speaking Flemish and
French-speaking Walloons. Immigrants were actually encouraged
to form their own insulated urban enclaves. When factories began
closing in the 1970s, unemployment, poverty, and alienation set in.
Today, the grandchildren of Muslim immigrants still feel estranged
from their own country, and a small but dangerous minority have
turned to crime and Islamist extremism. “You have so many people
who are adrift and decide terrorism
is a shortcut to paradise,” said Spanish
counterterrorism prosecutor Dolores
Delgado. “It gives them a chance to get
revenge on society.”
Who recruits them?
Radical street preachers with extremist
groups such as Sharia4Belgium. These
recruiters wander through poor North
African neighborhoods, telling disaffected
young men they’re being discriminated
against because they’re Muslims
and encouraging them to fight with
jihadist groups in the Middle East. Per
capita, Belgium has provided the highest
number of ISIS recruits in the Western
world, with about 560 Belgians waging
jihad in Iraq and Syria. At first, Belgian
counterterrorism officials were actually
happy to see these young extremists
leave. But as the Western coalition battling
ISIS has eroded the group’s territory
in Iraq and Syria, its young European
fighters have pivoted toward their home
countries as a new battleground. About
120 Belgian jihadists have returned, and
their mission is terrorist attacks, intelligence
officials say.
How is Belgium responding?
Its security forces have proved to be
amazingly dysfunctional. When suspected
Paris attacker Salah Abdeslam,
a Belgian national, slipped back over
the border into Belgium after the siege,
it took counterterrorism officials four
months to locate the most wanted man
in Europe—even though he was living
in Molenbeek, yards from his childhood
home. After his capture, Politico .com
reported last week, intelligence officials questioned Abdeslam for
only one hour over four days. Belgium’s security forces are small
in number, and have been overwhelmed by the extremist threat.
“Frankly, we don’t have the infrastructure to properly investigate
hundreds of individuals suspected of terror links,” one anonymous
counterterrorism official told BuzzFeed.com. Belgium’s government,
meanwhile, is paralyzed by division and bureaucracy
Why is the government so divided?
Belgium is essentially three distinct regions glued together: Dutchspeaking
Flanders in the North, French-speaking Wallonia in the
South, and Brussels-Capital. Each of these regions has its own
overlapping and labyrinthine government. The city of Brussels, for
example, has 19 different municipalities and six different police
departments. Officials engage in constant political infighting, making
it difficult to organize a cohesive counterterrorism response.
Molenbeek Mayor Françoise Schepmans has admitted that a
month before the Paris attacks, she was given a list with the names
and addresses of more than 80 suspected Islamic militants in her
area but failed to act. “What was I supposed to do about them?”
Schepmans said. “It is not my job to
track down possible terrorists.”
Can Belgium adapt?
Money is now being poured into
Belgium’s overwhelmed security apparatus,
and the intelligence services are
trying to recruit more Arabic-speaking
analysts for surveillance efforts. Se curi
ty officials have also called for the
EU to do a much better job of sharing
information about potential terrorists.
But the best way to tackle Belgium’s
homegrown problem is to prevent radicalization
in the first place, says Yves
Goldstein, cabinet chief to the Brussels
regional president. That would require
integrating ghettos like Molenbeek
into Belgian society; diversifying the
schools; and bringing in new cafés,
businesses, and cultural offerings. “We
need to open the minds of these young
people,” says Goldstein. “What can we
do to manage young people who prefer
death to life?”
Molenbeek: Europe’s jihadi capital
Filled with kebab shops and teahouses, the
largely Moroccan Brussels neighborhood of
Molenbeek has become the heart of a terrorist
network that has caused carnage across
Europe. The district—with a population of
100,000—was home to several of the Paris
attackers, as well as other terrorist suspects.
High school dropout and youth unemployment
rates in Molenbeek are among the highest
in all of Belgium, and radical preachers hang
out in cafés and mosques in the area, trying
to persuade these disaffected young men and
women to embrace Islamist extremism as a
source of meaning and glory. Many of the
young recruits are already involved in crime.
And when Belgian Muslims do turn to extremism,
they are often protected from the authorities
by their neighbors. “When you do a raid
on a house, in normal areas people talk or help
if they think someone was a terrorist,” says
Belgian federal prosecutor Eric Van der Sypt.
“People are not collaborating in Molenbeek.
They are throwing stones at the police.”

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