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French-Arab Slum Youths Joined Insurgency
AP ^ | 11/25/04 | SCHEHEREZADE FARAMARZI

Posted on 11/26/2004 7:40:35 AM PST by Pikamax

French-Arab Slum Youths Joined Insurgency

SCHEHEREZADE FARAMARZI

Associated Press

PARIS - The two teenage friends hardly seemed like Islamic radicals. They smoked marijuana, drank beer, listened to rap and wore jeans.

Yet the pair of French Muslims died insurgents in Iraq - one a suicide car bomber, say relatives who traced the young men's path from the slums of Paris through a religious school in Syria to the fight against the U.S.-led coalition next door.

Like many young Muslims here, Abdelhalim Badjoudj and Redouane el-Hakim didn't have jobs, and relatives and friends say they grew more alienated in recent years, surrounded by secular Western culture and by what many Muslims see as a subtle bigotry among Frenchmen against Arabs.

Badjoudj, who would have turned 19 on Dec. 16, allegedly blew himself up on Oct. 20 while driving a car filled with explosives near a U.S. patrol on Baghdad's airport road, wounding two American soldiers and two Iraqi police officers. He is thought to be the second French citizen to have carried out a suicide attack in Iraq.

The body of el-Hakim, 19, reportedly was found July 17 after U.S. troops bombed a suspected insurgent hide-out in Fallujah, the city west of Baghdad that was overrun this month by U.S. and Iraqi troops.

French officials also confirmed the death of a third French insurgent, identified as Tarek W. In his 20s, he reportedly was killed Sept. 17 after operating for several months in Iraq's Sunni Triangle, where most foreign fighters are based. No other details were available.

Although the number of French-born fighters in Iraq appears small - perhaps a dozen or more - anti-terrorism officials worry that some of the young men of mostly Tunisian and Algerian descent will return home with combat skills to wage jihad in France.

"They become like stars," Gilles Leclair, director of France's Anti-Terrorism Coordination Unit, told The Associated Press. Leclair confirmed the deaths of el-Hakim, Badjoudj and Tarek W., and he suggested there were more like them in Iraq.

"We have intelligence information that some people are still present in Iraq," Leclair told AP. But he said that "it's too early to say we have 10, 15, 40."

El-Hakim and Badjoudj lived in the same northern Paris neighborhood. Both were unemployed and came from broken families.

"If he had work, this wouldn't have happened," Badjoudj's uncle, Hicham, told AP. "He saw no future for himself."

The uncle, who insisted that he be quoted only by his first name, said Badjoudj never knew his father, an Algerian who left his Tunisian mother when he was 3 and his brother Sabri was about 1. Badjoudj's mother - Hicham's sister - had five more children with her second husband, an Egyptian, and now may be living in Syria or Egypt, he said.

Hicham said Sabri, 17, followed Badjoudj to Iraq a couple of months ago and may have recently moved to the northern city of Mosul after the U.S. offensive in Fallujah.

The uncle is at a loss to explain why Badjoudj was willing to sacrifice his life in Iraq, when he could hardly speak Arabic or identify with that country's culture.

"Abdelhalim drank beer, he smoked hashish a lot," said Hicham, describing his nephew as extremely shy and quiet but "super kind" and "super polite."

But Hicham noted many Muslims in France and other Western countries have trouble relating to secular culture and often find it hard to make a living. Nearly a tenth of France's 60 million people are Muslims, many of whom live in high-rise public housing slums that breed violence and crime.

"There's no work here. There's no caring father. Life is tough," said Hicham, 36.

Also, more important, America's presence in Iraq and Israel's occupation of Palestinian land are behind much of the anger among Muslim youth, including in Europe. Their anger and frustration are fanned by daily TV images of Palestinians being shot and killed by Israeli forces or Iraqi towns coming under U.S. bombardment. Extremist and radical leaders use this anger and despair to recruit fighters for the holy war in Iraq.

El-Hakim, a Tunisian, was one of five children and was raised by his mother, Habiba, according to the newspaper Le Parisien. He reportedly dropped out of an apprenticeship at a neighborhood bakery and later started a sandwich shop that failed.

AP was unable to contact el-Hakim's family. But according to Le Parisien's report, friends and relatives described him as easygoing until he came under the influence of an older brother, Boubakr, said to be a more religious man who wore traditional Muslim clothing. Boubakr is now in a Syrian jail, apparently for trying to cross into Iraq this year.

The el-Hakim brothers reportedly frequented the Iqra Mosque in the western Paris suburb of Levallois-Perret. Authorities closed the mosque in June and briefly arrested its members, including an Algerian cleric who is thought to have preached radical views and encouraged worshippers to pursue jihad, or holy war.

El-Hakim's radicalization was recent, his family said. "He was smoking (marijuana) until six months ago," his sister, Khadija, told Le Parisien.

Hicham said Badjoudj and five or six other French Muslim friends - all unemployed - had gone to Syria last year and enrolled in a theology school in the capital, Damascus. All of them ended up in Iraq, he said.

Six months after leaving for Syria, Badjoudj returned to Paris for a visit, his uncle said. He married an 18-year-old sweetheart of Moroccan background but less than a month later went back to Syria.

"He said, 'Inshallah (God willing), I will be going to Iraq,'" Hicham recalled. "He wanted to help the brothers, the Arabs. He wanted to be with them."

Hicham said he could not change his nephew's mind.

"I told him not to go, that I would try to find him a job here. But I didn't try hard enough. I didn't know he would become a kamikaze," Hicham said, speaking in Arabic.

"He said life was much better over there (in Syria), that people are nicer, (that) people live like crazy here."

"He said, 'I want to live just one whole day in peace,'" Hicham said.

Hicham said he was certain that Badjoudj and his friends were indoctrinated and recruited by Islamic radicals while in Syria, not France. But he also said money was sent to them from France for their accommodation, food and clothing, although he claimed he didn't know who sent it.

According to Le Figaro, Lotfi Rihani, a French citizen of Tunisian origin, died last year in a suicide bombing in Iraq. It said Rihani had links to a cell of Islamic militants now on trial in France for plotting to attack a market during the 1999 Christmas holidays in the eastern French city of Strasbourg.

Leclair, the director of France's Anti-Terrorism Coordination Unit, said there is no organized network in France recruiting young Muslims to join the insurgency in Iraq. He said Islamic radicals look for recruits at places where young Muslims congregate, such as fast food restaurants, cell phone shops and cybercafes.

"They go to the mosque, discuss, they receive radical prayers, they hear a lot of things and most of the time they are unemployed ... and it's a kind of adventure. They go because it's an honor to go," he said.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: enemy; flypaperstrategy; insurgents; iraq; killed

1 posted on 11/26/2004 7:40:35 AM PST by Pikamax
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To: Pikamax
So Iraq has become a terrorist Roach Motel for French Islamofascists as well.

Chirac should be thanking us.

2 posted on 11/26/2004 7:46:15 AM PST by E. Pluribus Unum (Drug prohibition laws help fund terrorism.)
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To: E. Pluribus Unum

French In Name Only, but Certifiably Dead As Dodos.


3 posted on 11/26/2004 7:49:11 AM PST by Atlantic Friend (Cursum Perficio)
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To: Pikamax

Just a couple of nice kids, marijuana-smoking, beer swelling layabouts. Who would have thought they would go to Iraq to murder people they never had never set eyes on before?

I think the psychology of it is guilty conscience. These kids know that Muslims aren't supposed to drink alchohol.
So they start feeling guilty and useless. So they resolve to square their consciences by blowing up infidels.

Very much like the psychology of liberals. Deep down, they know it's wrong to do some of the things they do. So they absolve their consciences by raising other people's taxes or undermining their country.


4 posted on 11/26/2004 7:50:19 AM PST by Cicero (Nil illegitemus carborundum est)
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To: Pikamax

They and their families get a government check to live on, so they use idle time to listen to imams, who upon passing the collection plate, tell them how abused they are. Makes you wonder if these peabrains would have been quite so willing to go kill other muslims(remember more Iraqis than troops have been killed by these guys) if they and their families had to, say, work, to get their daily bread. Maybe they would not have had as much time to listen to moronic mullahs. Sorta like the "palestinians" and the U.N. largesse.


5 posted on 11/26/2004 7:52:24 AM PST by JeeperFreeper
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To: Atlantic Friend
French In Name Only...

They were unemployed, dissolute, derelict Muslim lowlife addicts living in France, and now they are not living anywhere.

I still say Chirac should be thanking us.

6 posted on 11/26/2004 7:53:28 AM PST by E. Pluribus Unum (Drug prohibition laws help fund terrorism.)
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To: Cicero
So they start feeling guilty and useless. So they resolve to square their consciences by blowing up infidels.

I think it's more of a romantic idea for them--a triumphant return to the homeland where they will fight the New Crusade and drive the infidel from the Land of Mohammed.

Or some sh!t like that.

7 posted on 11/26/2004 8:05:39 AM PST by randog (What the....?!)
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To: Pikamax
But Hicham noted many Muslims in France and other Western countries have trouble relating to secular culture and often find it hard to make a living.

It's stupid to bring in many immigrants who cannot make a living for themselves --- yet we're doing the same thing.

8 posted on 11/26/2004 8:06:41 AM PST by FITZ
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To: Pikamax

"Franqistan's Monsters"


9 posted on 11/26/2004 8:08:16 AM PST by sheik yerbouty
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To: Pikamax

Can France now deport them? They are a big problem there.
Young girls get gang-raped if they aren't covered up and diners sometimes return to their cars to find them vandalized or burned by these street thugs. If the government continues to favor these thugs over their own people, the people will revolt and they'll have a big problem.


10 posted on 11/26/2004 9:22:06 AM PST by followerofchrist
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To: Pikamax
said Hicham, describing his nephew as extremely shy and quiet but "super kind" and "super polite."

BARF! should be extremely devious and evil but "super delusional" and "super dumb"

11 posted on 11/26/2004 10:30:49 AM PST by Selene
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