IS reportedly goes on-air in Afghanistan to encourage youth to join ranks

DUSHANBE, December 18, 2015, Asia-Plus – Russian news channel RT , formerly Russian Today , reports Islamic State (IS) militant group has launched its own radio station in Afghanistan, encouraging local youth to enroll in jihadists ranks and airing anti-government Islamic rulings, or fatwa.  The extremist group’s emissaries have become particularly active in Afghanistan in […]

Asia-Plus

DUSHANBE, December 18, 2015, Asia-Plus – Russian news channel

RT

, formerly

Russian Today

, reports Islamic State (IS) militant group has launched its own radio station in Afghanistan, encouraging local youth to enroll in jihadists ranks and airing anti-government Islamic rulings, or fatwa.  The extremist group’s emissaries have become particularly active in Afghanistan in 2015.

The news of Islamic State’s Afghan radio station was reported by Ahmad Shakib, a Kabul-based journalist working for

The New York Times

.

The Caliphate Radio is reportedly going on-air in Afghanistan’s Nangarhar province just east of the capital Kabul, on the Pakistani border.

Expansion of the notorious extremist group into Afghanistan is believed to be linked to plans to take heroin production and trafficking under full control.  Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) is also suspected of nurturing plans to expand its activities further to the north, into the Central Asian countries.

This is not the first time IS has dispersed terrorist propaganda through modern technical means.

Along with HD-quality videos of IS-committed atrocities, the group publishes Dabeq, its notorious online English-language magazine, and distributes propaganda via radio waves.

Islamic State launched a multilingual radio station in the Iraqi city of Mosul, which had a population of two million on June 10, 2015, months before overrunning it.

According to

Al Arabiya

, the

Al-Bayan

(The Dispatch) radio network went on air on April 7 in Arabic, Kurdish, English, French and Russian.

“It sounds like we are listening to the BBC,” 

Al Arabiya News

cited Jasmine Opperman, a senior analyst for the Terrorism Research & Analysis Consortium (TRAC), as saying.

The high quality of the broadcast and the professional tone of the American-accented anchor delivering typical English-language newscast prompted

The Washington Post

to draw comparisons between

Al-Bayan

and

American National Public Radio

(NPR).

Join us on social media!

Article translations:

Related Article

Tenisi
Оби зулол
Оби зулол

Most Read

Коммерсбонк Точикистон

Recent Articles

Software Updates: Your First Line of Defense Against Cyber ​​Threats

In today's digital age, the importance of timely software...

The number of migrants from Central Asia, including Tajikistan, has increased in Poland — expert

Many migrants from Central Asian countries are increasingly reluctant to work in Russia and are exploring new destinations.

Tajikistan to transfer rural water utilities to a unified digital platform

The task is to integrate all 500 drinking water supply organizations in the country into one system.

Dushanbe authorities tighten price controls ahead of the Eid al-Adha holiday

Briefings and explanatory discussions are being conducted with vendors in the capital's markets, and violators face administrative protocols.

Major global investment companies show interest in Tajikistan’s economy

Among them are J.P. Morgan, Loomis Sayles & Company, Morgan Stanley Investment Management, and Global Evolution.

President Rahmon awarded UN University for Peace Certificate of Recognition

He is awarded for "significant contribution to establishing peace, developing regional cooperation, and strengthening mutual understanding between peoples."