Denmark’s security service said Sunday it
suspects around 80 people have travelled from Denmark to Syria to join the civil
war since mid-2012.
In a report, the service known as PET said
those who travel to Syria are mainly Sunni Muslim men aged between 16 and 25.
At least seven were killed in Syria and around 40 have returned to Denmark
again, PET said.
The Syria conflict has attracted hundreds
of foreign fighters from European countries, many of whom have joined Islamic
militant groups.
AFP/Achilleas Zavallis - A rebel fighter fires his gun against a Syrian government troop position in Aleppo, on October 21, 2012
The Norwegian intelligence service PST has
said an estimated 30 to 40 people - and possibly more - have left from Norway,
including two teenage sisters aged 16 and 19 who made headlines last month.
The Danish recruits are mainly from
“Islamist environments,” and criminal gangs, PET said. It also warned that the
number of those with ties to criminal gangs that join Islamist circles is increasing.
Vulnerable
It said there is active recruitment in
Denmark of young, socially vulnerable people and that the recruiters approach
their targets directly and through social media.
“The threat and the security risks tied to
the increasing number of people from Denmark that participate in the armed
conflict in Syria is PET’s highest priority right now,” PET chief Jakob Scharf
said.
“It is our assessment that among those who
have traveled there are a number of people who have joined groups in Syria that
share al-Qaeda’s global, militant Islamist ideology,” the head of PET’s center
for terror analysis, Soeren Jensen added.
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.