APRIL 16 2015 (The Conway Bulletin) – In a move designed to stop young Muslims heading off to Syria to fight for the radical group IS, Georgia plans to outlaw membership of any foreign group considered to be a terrorist organisation.
Current legislation does not deal with this issue and the authorities want more power to arrest both those people heading off to Syria to join IS and people who have returned to Georgia.
The focus in Georgia of IS recruitment is the Pankisi Gorge, on the border of Russia’s North Caucasus region.
Pankisi, which lies 2-1/2 hours drive from Tbilisi to the northeast, on the border with Chechnya, has a population of 10,000 and the majority of them are Kists, an Islamic ethnic group similar to Chechens.
Media reports have said that 20 to 80 men have headed out of the Pankisi Gorge to fight for IS in Syria.
Tbilisi rules with a light touch in the Pankisi Gorge which has a history of producing radical Muslim fighters dating back to the Chechen wars of the 1990s and the early 2000s.
Khaso Khangoshvili a member of the the Council of Elders, the 35-people body that de facto governs Pankisi, believes that the stricter laws will help.
“The new law will improve the situation, but the government should care more about the economy of our region,” he told the Bulletin.
ENDS
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(News report from Issue No. 228, published on April 22 2015)
