• Chechen Jihadis Leave Syria, Join the Fight in Ukraine - The Daily Beast
    http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/09/04/chechen-jihadists-leave-syria-join-the-fight-in-urkaine.html


    Pete Kiehart for The Daily Beast (Photo Illustration)

    MARIUPOL, Ukraine — Just an hour’s drive from this city under siege, at an old resort on the Azov Sea that’s now a military base, militants from Chechnya—veterans of the jihad in their own lands and, more recently, in Syria—now serve in what’s called the Sheikh Mansur Battalion. Some of them say they have trained, at least, in the Middle East with fighters for the so-called Islamic State, or ISIS.

    Among the irregular forces who’ve enlisted in the fight against the Russian-backed separatists in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, few are more controversial or more dangerous to the credibility of the cause they say they want to serve. Russian President Vladimir Putin would love to portray the fighters he supports as crusaders against wild-eyed jihadists rather than the government in Ukraine that wants to integrate the country more closely with Western Europe.

    Yet many Ukrainian patriots, desperate to gain an edge in the fight against the Russian-backed forces, are willing to accept the Chechen militants on their side.

    Over the past year, dozens of Chechen fighters have come across Ukraine’s border, some legally, some illegally, and connected in Donbas with the Right Sector, a far-right-wing militia. The two groups, with two battalions, have little in common, but they share an enemy and they share this base.

    • Raised by ISIS, Returned to Chechnya: ‘These Children Saw Terrible Things’

      Every day, Belant Zulgayeva gets a knot in her throat watching her grandchildren play their violent games, what she calls their “little war.” They talk very little, but they run around, hide and, occasionally, slam one another to the ground with a disturbing ferocity.

      Ms. Zulgayeva is on the front line of a different kind of struggle: an effort by the Russian government to bring home and care for Russian children like her three grandchildren, who were raised by Islamist militants in the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL.

      As the American-led coalition and Syrian government forces captured cities that had been held by the Islamic State, they found among the ruins a grim human wreckage of the organization’s once successful recruitment drive: hundreds and perhaps thousands of children born to or brought with the men and women who had flocked to Syria in support of the Islamic State.

      While Russia, which has so far returned 71 children and 26 women since August, may seem surprisingly lenient in its policy, its actions reflect a hardheaded security calculus: better to bring children back to their grandparents now than have them grow up in camps and possibly return as radicalized adults.
      “What should we do, leave them there so somebody will recruit them?” said Ziyad Sabsabi, the Russian senator who runs the government-backed program. “Yes, these children saw terrible things, but when we put them in a different environment, with their grandparents, they change quickly.”

      European governments have shown little sympathy toward adult males who volunteered to join the militant group. Rory Stewart, the British international development minister, for example, told the BBC that “the only way of dealing with them will be, in almost every case, to kill them.”
      But most European countries, including Britain, have taken a softer approach to repatriating most of the women and the estimated 1,000 children of militants from the European Union who fought in Syria. France has placed most of the 66 minors who have returned so far from the Islamic State in foster or adoptive homes. Some have joined relatives. A few older ones, who were combatants, have been incarcerated.

      Analysts estimate that as many as 5,000 family members of foreign terrorist recruits are now marooned in camps and orphanages in Iraq and Syria. Russia and Georgia are in the forefront of countries helping family members to return, said Liesbeth van der Heide, the co-author of “Children of the Caliphate,” a study published last summer by the International Center for Counter-Terrorism in The Hague.
      As Mr. Sabsabi acknowledged, many, if not most, of the returning children were exposed to unspeakable acts of macabre violence, including roles in execution videos. Many children were desensitized to violence through ceaseless indoctrination, paramilitary training and participation in various other crimes.

      Germany’s domestic intelligence chief, Hans-Georg Maassen, told Reuters the children of the Islamic State were “brainwashed,” and that “we have to consider that these children could be living time bombs.”

      That is not an easy view to take of Bilal, 4, a little Russian boy with a mop of sandy blond hair and spindly arms who last summer became the first child returned to Russia from Islamic-State controlled territory.

      He makes car noises and pushes a toy around the kitchen table in his grandmother’s apartment in Grozny, the capital of Chechnya. He says little about his time in Iraq, says his grandmother, Rosa Murtazayeva, but it is obvious he remains touchingly attached to his father, Hasan.
      With American-backed forces closing in, father and son survived like hunted animals in basements in Mosul, which the Islamic State controlled for three years. Bilal recalls little but the boiled potatoes they survived on. “I was with papa,” Bilal said. “There were no other boys.”

      After they were captured, his father vanished into Iraqi prisons. Emaciated and filthy when he was found, Bilal is now outwardly fine. Ms. Murtazayeva said he is sociable at kindergarten and has many friends.

      That is not always the case. Even months after returning, some children remain grimly silent, despite various therapies and pampering from their grandparents.

      When the Islamic State tide went out, Hadizha, 8, was found like flotsam in a Mosul street. Her grandmother identified her from a photograph posted by an aid group. She was lying in a gutter, her arm and chin bandaged from burns.
      What became of her mother, two brothers and a sister is unclear, said the grandmother, Zura, identified only by her first name to protect the child’s privacy. She cares for Hadizha in a small village in Chechnya.

      “I gently asked her, ‘What happened?’ but she doesn’t want to say anything,” Zura said. “I want to hope they are alive, to latch onto something. But she is certain. She says they were shot, but that she waved her hands and said in Arabic, ‘Don’t shoot,’ and saved herself in that way.”

      While clearly troubled, Hadizha hardly seems to pose any risks. She spends her days curled up on a couch, her eyes distant and angry, watching cartoons on a big-screen television. “She doesn’t need anything else,” her grandmother said. “She is silent.”

      Others have fared better. Adlan, 9, left for Syria with his mother and father and two siblings but returned alone, delivered by Russians working with the repatriation program.
      Photo

      In the Islamic State, he said, he attended school, rode bikes and played tag with other Russian-speaking children. During the battle for Mosul, something exploded in his house, he said. He survived but the rest of the family was killed. “He said he saw his mother and brother and sisters, and they were sleeping,” said his Chechen grandfather, Eli, identified only by his first name to protect the child’s privacy.

      Asked by a child psychologist to draw a picture with crayons, Adlan drew a house and flowers, deemed to be a good sign. “I think it will pass. He is still young and has a child’s memory,” Eli said.

      Women from Muslim areas of Russia sometimes traveled to Syria or Iraq with their husbands, and sometimes in search of a husband, said Ekaterina L. Sokiryanskaya, director of the Conflict Analysis and Prevention Center, adding that they present a different set of resettlement issues.

      “Women were not in the battlefield, but that does not mean that they were not radicalized, that they were not supporters of this terrorist organization and its very ugly ideology,” Ms. Sokiryanskaya said. “There were many very radical women joining.”
      Hava Beitermurzayeva, now 22, slipped away in 2015 from her parents’ home in the village of Gekhi in Chechnya to marry an Islamic State soldier she had met online, and she wound up living in Raqqa, the capital of the militant group’s so-called caliphate in Syria.

      She said in an interview that she spent most of her time cloistered at home, with a new son. The Islamic State militants, she added, enforced religious rules and staged public executions, by beheading or stoning, for crimes like adultery.

      “The passers-by could stop and watch,” Ms. Beitermurzayeva said, though she says she never did herself.

      Back at home now, she seems remarkably untroubled by her experiences and still enthusiastic about the caliphate, though, as she says, it was not God’s will to work out this time. “Everything that happened to me was determined by God,” she said. “If I were to regret it, I would be unhappy with the fate that God gave me.”

      At first, Hamzat, 6, and his younger brothers, the boys who battle each other in their grandmother’s living room, talked very little when they moved in with her in Dachu-Borzoi, a village in the Caucasus Mountains in Chechnya. They just played their war games. But with time, they mellowed, Ms. Zulgayeva said.

      They had been living in Tal Afar, Iraq, when American-backed Iraqi forces surrounded the city. Their father died in the fighting. After a bomb flattened a neighboring house, their mother, Fatima, decided to get out with the three boys and their baby sister.

      But Hamzat and his brothers, Malik, 4, and Abdullah, 5, became separated from her at a checkpoint. She remains detained in Iraq, while the Russian government returned the boys and their baby sister, Halima, who turned 1 this month.

      “It’s a miracle they all made it back alive,” Ms. Zulgayeva said.


      https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/24/world/europe/chechnya-russia-isis-children-return.html
      #enfants #enfance

  • Comment convaincre aisément quelqu’un qu’il a commis un crime | Passeur de sciences
    http://passeurdesciences.blog.lemonde.fr/2015/02/03/comment-convaincre-aisement-quelquun-quil-a-commis-un

    C’est une donnée qui fait mal. Selon l’organisme américain Innocence Project, dont l’objectif est de faire sortir de prison celles et ceux qui ont condamnés par erreur, environ 30 % des personnes innocentées sur la base de l’ADN ont au préalable avoué un crime qu’elles n’ont pas commis. En France, un des exemples les plus mémorables de ce phénomène est celui de Patrick Dils, condamné – par deux fois – à tort pour le meurtre de deux garçons à Montigny-lès-Metz en 1986, après avoir reconnu les faits face aux enquêteurs. Si l’on met de côté les pratiques policières qui consistent à extorquer des aveux, lesquels constituent une des plus puissantes preuves retenues par la machine judiciaire, l’aspect le plus troublant du sujet tient au fait que, bien souvent, les suspects finissent par croire à la vraisemblance de l’histoire inventée qu’ils racontent, grâce à la force des « faux souvenirs ». C’est pour comprendre la manière dont fonctionne ce processus que deux psychologues, Julia Shaw (université du Bedfordshire, Royaume-Uni) et Stephen Porter (université de Colombie-Britannique, Canada), ont élaboré une expérience originale dont les résultats, qui viennent d’être publiés par la revue Psychological Science, eux aussi dérangent, car ils montrent à quel point il est simple de convaincre une personne qu’elle a commis un crime (au sens anglo-saxon du terme)...

    #brrrr

    • À force de vivre, je me rends compte que de se souvenir d’une chose, c’est en commencer la falsification. Parce qu’on trie ce qui est « utile » de se souvenir à chaque passage (plus on se souvient, plus les détails disparaissent) et qu’on reconstitue ce qui manque (parce que les choses signifiantes d’un souvenir ne sont pas les mêmes selon le moment, le motif pour lesquels on appelle le souvenir), soit en comparant avec d’autres souvenirs connexes, soit par les apports extérieurs, les récits des autres personnes impliquées dans l’évènement d’origine.

      Par contre, je pense qu’on a un noyau dur de souvenirs « constitutifs » de notre personnalité et que notre intégrité mentale dans la vieillesse doit dépendre pas mal de ma manière dont les souvenirs ont été stockés et/ou souvenus/falsifiés.
      J’ai trouvé remarquables les témoignages de personnes âgées qui se mettent à se souvenir avec une acuité très forte de choses qu’elles avaient « oublié » pendant l’essentiel de leur vie. J’ai l’impression que ce noyau de souvenirs est à peu près intact tout au long de la vie, car « non-accédé » et donc « non-falsifié ».
      #mémoire

    • cette expérience, si elle se justifie scientifiquement me met très mal à l’aise éthiquement. Au nom de la science, peut-on ainsi manipuler des personnes ?

    • L’étude et son résumé

      Constructing Rich False Memories of Committing Crime
      http://pss.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/01/14/0956797614562862.abstract

      Memory researchers long have speculated that certain tactics may lead people to recall crimes that never occurred, and thus could potentially lead to false confessions. This is the first study to provide evidence suggesting that full episodic false memories of committing crime can be generated in a controlled experimental setting. With suggestive memory-retrieval techniques, participants were induced to generate criminal and noncriminal emotional false memories, and we compared these false memories with true memories of emotional events. After three interviews, 70% of participants were classified as having false memories of committing a crime (theft, assault, or assault with a weapon) that led to police contact in early adolescence and volunteered a detailed false account. These reported false memories of crime were similar to false memories of noncriminal events and to true memory accounts, having the same kinds of complex descriptive and multisensory components. It appears that in the context of a highly suggestive interview, people can quite readily generate rich false memories of committing crime.

  • L’OTAN met fin à sa coopération avec la Russie
    http://www.lecourrierderussie.com/2014/08/otan-fin-cooperation-russie

    Le Secrétaire général de l’OTAN Anders Fogh Rasmussen a annoncé jeudi 7 août la rupture de la coopération entre l’Alliance atlantique et la Russie. The post L’OTAN met fin à sa coopération avec la Russie appeared first on Le Courrier de Russie.

  • La Slovénie transformée en monde de glace

    Tykk is lammer Slovenia - Aftenposten

    http://www.aftenposten.no/nyheter/uriks/Tykk-is-lammer-Slovenia-7457814.html

    Tykk is lammer Slovenia

    Over 50.000 hjem har mistet strømmen og store skogsområder er skadet. Is og kulde har forårsaket skader for flere millioner euro.

    #slovénie #froid #brrrr... #climat

  • Assassin bug covers itself with a meat-shield of its victims - Boing Boing
    http://boingboing.net/2014/01/08/assassin-bug-covers-itself-wit.html

    Singaporean macrofocus photographer Nicky Bay produces wonderful portraits of insects in their natural setting. Particularly fascinating are the photos of bugs eating each other, particularly the shot above of an assassin bug (Acanthaspis sp.) which “decorate themselves with the corpses of their consumed prey,” forming a protective “meat-shield” as well as offering olfactory and visual camouflage to help it infiltrate ant-nests.

    @jean_no #entomologie

  •  » [Vidéo] The Corporation
    http://www.les-crises.fr/video-the-corporation

    Ce documentaire réalisé par Jennifer Abbott et Mark Achbar montre l’évolution des “Sociétés Anonymes” (appelées Corporations en anglais) aux USA, reprenant leur histoire depuis leur apparition avec la Révolution Industrielle, où elles étaient conçues pour répondre au bien public mais furent détournées de cet objectif par la recherche du profit.

    “De même que le requin est une machine à tuer, la Corporation est une machine à faire de l’argent.”

    Ce film est basé sur le livre The corporation, the pathological pursuit of profit and power (Les Multinationales, la recherche pathologique du profit et du pouvoir) de Joel Bakan.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=0ZmQ-YL63fM


    la Corporation est une machine à faire de l’ #argent
    #profit