Social networks
In addition to radio, IS makes extensive use of social media, said a senior security official on condition of anonymity. “Most of the recruitments take place via WhatsApp, Facebook, and online,” he said. “Mostly, they target younger Afghans on university campuses and in the cities.”
Abdul Rahman, 23, was a shopkeeper in Jalalabad before joining IS for a year. He said he started watching videos of IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, which his friend sent via Facebook. One day, the friend arrived at the shop with a young mullah. They went for a walk and the mullah spoke about the sufferings of Muslims in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and other parts of the world, and the dream of an Islamic empire.
In early 2015, Rahman joined IS at its Afghan headquarters, in Nangarhar’s Achin District, where he met foreign fighters as well as locals. He told IRIN that he loved the idea of everyone living together, and that the commander would always make sure that everyone had enough to eat.
“It was a happy family,” he said.
In the following months, Rahman learnt to use guns and started working with a team that used Facebook, Viber, and WhatsApp to recruit people. He enjoyed it, but missed his wife and children – a feeling that intensified when his family managed to send him a message.
One day, Rahman saw IS fighters brutally kill one of their own after accusing the man of being a government spy. It shook him up, and he defected after telling his commander he was going to meet someone he’d recruited at Nangarhar University.
“I came straight to my home and told my father everything,” said Rahman, who quickly left Jalalabad with his family so that IS couldn’t track him down.
But Rahman is an exception. Most people who join IS stick with them, and wouldn’t dare to run away even if they wished to.
Security officials told IRIN that they are struggling to counter IS propaganda on social media, and that they have twice destroyed the militants’ pirate radio station.
“But it is a mobile radio station, on the move, working from some house or a room,” said a different senior security officer, who also requested anonymity.
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(TOP PHOTO: Samar Khel camp, near Jalalabad, where Afghans displaced by war have taken shelter. CREDIT: Bilal Sarwary/IRIN)