Fatwa Index: Terrorist Organizations Capitalize on Coronavirus Crisis

A nun surveys the aftermath of an attack on Cairo's Coptic cathedral (File photo: Reuters)
A nun surveys the aftermath of an attack on Cairo's Coptic cathedral (File photo: Reuters)
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Fatwa Index: Terrorist Organizations Capitalize on Coronavirus Crisis

A nun surveys the aftermath of an attack on Cairo's Coptic cathedral (File photo: Reuters)
A nun surveys the aftermath of an attack on Cairo's Coptic cathedral (File photo: Reuters)

The Global Fatwa Index (GFI) of Egypt's Dar al-Iftaa indicated that terrorist organizations are trying to compensate their losses incurred since the global outbreak of COVID-19 by trying to restore lands they had lost or by mobilizing new members.

The index stated that 45 percent of the terrorist organizations’ discourse associated with coronavirus promoted an attempt to revitalize their presence.

In a recent report, the index noted that ISIS was the most interested organization in achieving this goal, indicating that since the pandemic, it has taken upon itself to expand the scope of its terrorist operations in various countries.

ISIS has increased its operations in Africa through Boko Haram and in Asia through Abu Sayyaf group. The terrorist group also called for intensifying the operations in the Philippines and Indonesia and sought to expand its activity to the Maldives as well as Europe.

The index also confirmed that ISIS sought to exploit the situation resulting from the coronavirus pandemic to transfer prisoners.

It clarified that al-Qaeda organization also aimed to increase its terrorist operations through its branches in Africa including Harakat al-Shabaab and Group to Support Islam and Muslims (GSIM).

Since the era of former leader Osama bin Laden, al-Qaeda’s ideological speech was directed at non-Muslims in the West, aiming to undermine the confidence of Western peoples with their governments and invite them to learn about Islam through the organizations’ discourse.

The index warned that the terrorist organizations are hopeful they can return and compensate their previous losses, which could raise the morale of their followers or bring new followers. However, the index affirmed that global governments are capable of confronting the operations of terrorist organizations.



Israeli Strike in Syria's Quneitra Kills Two

The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP
The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP
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Israeli Strike in Syria's Quneitra Kills Two

The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP
The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP

A Syria war monitor said an Israeli airstrike on Thursday in Quneitra province in the Syria-controlled Golan Heights killed two people, days after major raids elsewhere in the country.

"An Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle" on the Damascus-Quneitra road, "killing two people," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, without identifying them.

A local security source told AFP that "two charred bodies were removed" from the vehicle that was hit.

The Israeli army did not immediately comment on the reported strike.

Thursday's strike came days after raids blamed on Israel killed 18 people in the central province of Hama, according to Syrian authorities.

The Observatory said those strikes killed 27 people, including six civilians, and targeted a "scientific research area" and other sites in the province's Masyaf area.