Al Qaeda racism could deter black African recruits: Report

By ANI
Sunday, July 25, 2010

NEW YORK - A National Counter Terrorism Center terrorism bulletin from October 2009 has come out with the argument that highlighting al Qaeda racism could deter black African recruits.

The Oct. 19, 2009 “National Terrorism Bulletin,” obtained by ABC News, is headlined “Highlighting AQIM’s Racism Could Deter Black African Recruits.”

AQIM is an acronym for Al Qaeda in the Lands of the Islamic Maghreb, a terrorist group based in Algeria that the NCTC says was “originally formed in 1998 as the Salafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC), a faction of the Armed Islamic Group, which was the largest and most active terrorist group in Algeria.

The GSPC was renamed in January 2007 after the group officially joined al-Qa’ida in September 2006. The GSPC had close to 30,000 members at its height, but the Algerian Government’s counter-terrorism efforts have reduced the group’s ranks to fewer than 1,000.”

The NCTC concluded that a “strategic communications campaign that spotlights the cultural and racial insensitivities” that AQIM “holds towards blacks in North and West Africa probably would hinder the group’s growing efforts to attract black recruits in those areas. Widespread discrimination against black Africans is a contentious issue in North and West Africa, particularly in regions where slavery still exists…”

The bulletin says that some recruits “claimed that AQIM was clearly racist against some black members from West Africa because they were only sent against lower-level targets.”

Elaborating on the president’s comments, a White House official told ABC News that the message was: “al Qaeda is a racist organization that treats black Africans like cannon fodder and does not value human life.”

The NCTC analyst suggested “highlighting AQIM’s preferential treatment of Arabs and exploitation of blacks probably would resonate with the local black populations.

Some black Africans probably would be receptive to messages comparing AQIM’s treatment of black Africans to the condition of slave castes in their countries.

Nearly 500,000 black Mauritanians, 43,000 black Nigerians, and 7,000 black Malians are enslaved from birth, often by Arabs or white Moors. (ANI)

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