About Article

Fuelling the fire: Al-Shabaab, counter-terrorism and radicalisation in Kenya

In the last decade, facing an increase in Al-Shabaab’s activities on its soil, Kenya has tightened up its counter-terrorism policy, intensifying security operations in vulnerable areas. However, Kenyan counter-terrorism measures have been criticised for overstepping legal boundaries, often degenerating into practices of indiscriminate repression against suspect communities. Adopting a social movement theory approach, this article investigates whether, and above all how, such practices may have detrimental effects, increasing radicalisation. The article shows that, by exacerbating frictions and widening socio-political divisions in the country, indiscriminate repression has increased a motivation to mobilise into terrorism among targeted groups while, at the same time, shaping conducive conditions enabling them to do so through emerging connections with Al-Shabaab. Such findings have substantial implications, highlighting the need for more targeted strategies tackling terrorism without setting in motion dynamics of violent interaction further undermining national security.

RELATED Articles

Education system in Pakistan

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Phasellus feugiat nisi non nunc elementum, id tincidunt enim scelerisque. Vestibulum ante ipsum primis in faucibus orci luctus et ultrices posuere cubilia curae; Maecenas fringilla, magna in dapibus scelerisque, purus enim accumsan libero, et ...