| Salafia Jihadia | |
|---|---|
| Dates of operation | 1990s–present[needs update] |
| Active regions | Morocco Spain Western Sahara |
| Ideology | Salafi jihadism |
| Size | 400+ (2002)[1] |
| Allies | |
| Opponents | |
| Wars | theInsurgency in the Maghreb (2002–present) and2011–2012 Moroccan protests |
Salafia Jihadia (Arabic:السلفية الجهاديةal-Salafiya al-jihadiya)[6] is aSalafi Jihadist militant group based inMorocco andSpain.[2] The group was allied withal-Qaeda andMoroccan Islamic Combatant Group (GICM).
The group was known for its participation in the2003 Casablanca bombings, in which twelve suicide bombers killed 33 people and injured over 100.[1] Salafia Jihadia has variously been described as a movement or loose network of groups, or as a generic term applied by Moroccan authorities for militant Salafi activists.[7][8]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(December 2023) |
Salafia Jihadia was formed in the early 1990s byMujahideen veterans of theSoviet–Afghan War.[1] The group was formed in opposition to the Arab states, including Morocco, that had joinedthe coalition against Iraq in theGulf War.[3][7] Along with theTakfir wal-Hijra group, Salafia Jihadia was eventually responsible for around 300 murders in Morocco as punishment for "non-Islamic behaviour."[1] The group has been associated with the Moroccan Islamic Combatant Group (GICM).[1][2] It also had links to the former AlgerianSalafist Group for Preaching and Combat (GSPC) and theLibyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG).[3][4] By 2002 the group had begun establishing ties with al-Qaeda, and had 400 known members.[1]
In 2002 members of the group were among those arrested as part ofan al-Qaeda plot to attack Western shipping in theStrait of Gibraltar with a speedboat manned by suicide bombers.[3] In July 2003, in a trial unrelated to the Casablanca bombings, ten members of the group were sentenced to death, and eight others to life imprisonment.[9] In February 2004, two cells inFez andMeknes were dismantled, with 37 people arrested after explosives and weapons were discovered during raids.[10] A Salafia Jihadia network operating in several Moroccan towns, includingMohammedia near Casablanca was unravelled by security forces in March 2005.[3] In December 2006, Spanish authorities announced that a cell of eleven people, ten Spanish citizens and one Moroccan associated with Salafia Jihadia had been dismantled.[3] According to Spanish anti-terrorism judgeBaltasar Garzón, members of jihadist cells in northern Morocco speak Spanish fluently and can easily slip in and out of Spain due to the short distance.[3]
After a decade of operating in secret, the group began to publicly appear in Morocco alongside20 February Movement demonstrations as part of theArab Spring in 2011.[5] In 2012, Morocco'sKing Mohammed pardoned several members and ideological leaders of the group, includingOmar al-Haddouchi,Hassan Kettani andMohamed Abdelwahhab al-Rafiki [fr]. The pardons came after the IslamistJustice and Development Party had won the elections and become the ruling party in the country following the Arab Spring, and after pressure from human rights organisations.[11] After the release of several radical Salafis, some ideological leaders of the group toned down their criticism of the king; in 2014 this began to cause a split in the movement as some members instead joined theIslamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which was rejected by others.[12][13]

Salafia Jihadia is said to function as a network of several loosely affiliatedSalafi jihadist groups and cells, including groups such as al Hijra Wattakfir, Attakfir Bidum Hijra, Assirat al Mustaqim, Ansar al Islam and Moroccan Afghans.[3][14] The spiritual leader and founder of the group isMohammed Fizazi [fr;de], former imam of theal-Quds Mosque (which was shut down by German authorities in 2010).[1][3]
Fizazi was arrested in 2003 and sentenced to 30 years imprisonment for his radical statements and connection to the Casablanca bombings.[15] Salafia Jihadia has since spawned a wider ideological movement out ofSaudi Arabia and theGulf states.[2]
On 16 May 2003, twelve suicide bombers from the Salafia Jihadia cell Al-Sirat Al-Musqatim ("The Correct Path") were responsible forfour coordinated bombing attacks targeting Westerners and Jews in Casablanca, which killed 33 people (plus all twelve suicide bombers) and injured over 100.[2][16][6][17] In the aftermath of the bombings, up to more than 2,000 individuals were prosecuted in Morocco in a wide-scale crackdown on Islamists and criminals.[7][18][19] The Moroccan Justice Ministry subsequently claimed that Salafia Jihadia had 699 activists in the country.[7] Some of the suicide bombers who failed to detonate their vests were captured by police.[20] Three of the failed bombers and another person, all members of Salafia Jihadia, were sentenced to death in August 2003.[21] In September, a court inKenitra gave 27 people, also all members of Salafia Jihadia sentences ranging from six months to 15 years for their involvement in the attacks.[21]
As part of the crackdown after the Casablanca bombings, a court inRabat in September 2003 sentenced a Frenchman, Robert Richard Antoine Pierre (aka Abu Abderrahmane) and three other members of Salafia Jihadia to life, while 22 others were given sentences ranging from 10 to 30 years imprisonment.[18][19][21] Accused of plotting attacks inTangier, Pierre was stated to have founded the Salafia Jihadia cell Al-Oussoud Khalidine ("Timeless Lions"), which had sent recruits for training in Afghanistan.[3][22] At least sixteen members of the group were identified, many of whom fled to Spain viaCeuta, while eight were arrested in Morocco.[3]
In November 2007, a trial was opened against 51 people arrested across several cities suspected of involvement with the Casablanca bombings, who were mainly associated with Salafia Jihadia.[3] Others convicted as part of the attacks were members of GICM.[1]
Salafia Jihadia is also thought to have had connections to and been involved in the2004 Madrid train bombings that killed 191 people and wounded over 2,000.[2] One of the terrorists convicted for the bombings,Jamal Zougam, was known to the intelligence services of several countries for his links to a complex international jihadist network that included Salafia Jihadia.[23] Zougam was also implicated by some of the failed suicide bombers who had been captured in the Casablanca bombings.[20]
{{cite journal}}:Cite journal requires|journal= (help)