Muslim terrorists are particularly good at forging successful rehabilitation compared to other prisoners, and some are studying psychology to better manipulate the work of prison therapists.
The Radical Countermeasures Project (CEP) and the European Policy Center (EPC) jointly launched on Tuesday Discussion paperInvestigate camouflaged compliance by terrorist criminals in European prisons.
Professor Ian Acheson, senior adviser to prison expert CEP and co-author of the dissertation, said: “
The paper states that Austrian Interior Minister Karl Nehammer “could fool the judicial system’s de-radification program,” killing four people and injuring 22 in a series of mass shootings in Vienna. He cited the example of Kujtim Fejzulai, who stated that he was released early before he was forced to do so. last year.
He also mentioned Usman Khan, a terrorist on the London Bridge who killed two people after being released early from prison. The UK then introduced new legislation to prevent convicted terrorists from being automatically released from prison before the end of their sentence without the permission of the Parole Commission.
But when it comes to non-Islamic terrorism, the paper said there were few examples of deception.
“When they appear, as in the case of Christchurch extremist Brenton Tarrant, it is often associated with the simple but catastrophic revocation of expert curiosity,” the paper reads.
Tarant, a 28-year-old Caucasian Australian man who is self-aware that a former communist has turned into an ecofascist, killed 51 worshipers at two Christchurch mosques on March 15, 2019. Further injured and live-streamed the slaughter.
The newspaper said police had failed to properly scrutinize the use of his firearms and seek appropriate references.
Acheson said that the current approach to managing the risk of violent extremists is “reactive, general, mechanical” and “excessively reliant on collaboration and devalues front-line expert intuition. “.
Amanda Paul, senior policy analyst at EPC, another co-author of this paper, allows terrorists to break through cracks, although a more comprehensive approach may be more costly or time consuming. He said that would result in “immeasurable” long-term political and human prices.
Acheson and Paul urged EU member states to end the automatic early release of terrorist offenders in one of 13 recommendations, in accordance with the United Kingdom.
The recommendation is that the burden of terrorism risk management is “different personnel with different resources and purposes, shared among institutions with different philosophical and organizational structures that function at different points in the journey”. It involves replacing the system with one “executive”. An interdisciplinary institution that coordinates risk management for terrorist prisoners. “
The authors argued that a more consistent approach would reduce takeover and other risks and enable long-term relationship building with categorical intervention.
They also use new technologies such as AI and other biodata collection methods to access the authenticity of terrorist claims when they are in prison or under remote surveillance after being released. Recommended to make it easier. More active surveillance, including “secret human assets”.
The authors argued that a more personalized approach was preferred to current general rehabilitation programs to deradical terrorists. People are being radicalized in various ways and need coordinated support to get out of violent extremism.
Acheson and Paul said ideologically motivated prisoners involved in risk assessment programs must have minimized contact so they could not share tips on how to “game the system.” ..
The authors also recommended “a carefully controlled therapeutic encounter between opposing ideological extremist groups” as they could help destroy the prison echo chambers.
“Although highly controversial, this approach can challenge false stories, humanitarian outgroups, and police deception,” the author said, at least asking for a way to consider it.
Apart from professional risk management, this paper suggested taking advantage of broader community support.