The Intifada of Ceuta
por Mark Joyce, 26 de diciembre de 2007
Muslim worshippers exiting mosques in SpainÂs North African enclave of Ceuta last month were handed pamphlets titled ÂDo you believe the PP can defend the Muslims of Ceuta? Juan Vivas, the Mayor-President of Ceuta, immediately accused the leftist political coalition responsible for putting out the pamphlets of trying to divide Ceuta Âbetween Muslims and Christians. Indeed, the pamphlets cite as a warning a statute of the center-right Popular Party (PP) which declares that the PP Âis influenced by the values of liberty, democracy, tolerance and Christian humanism from the Western tradition. Also on the pamphletsÂand printed above a photo of José MarÃa Aznar, Tony Blair and George W. Bush standing together at the Azores SummitÂis the claim that former Prime Minister Aznar once asked Muslims to apologize for Âthe eight centuries of Al-Ãndalus.Â
Aznar, in fact, never made such a demand. His remarks at the Washington-based Hudson Institute in September 2006 were meant to shine light on a double standard that exists in the world today: While Muslims constantly demand apologies from the West, they rarely feel compelled to apologize for their own actions. The truth is that Spaniards like Aznar are not the ones seeking apologies. Much rather, it is the Muslim world that is focused on the past, as the obsession of many Muslims to reconquer Al-Ãndalus makes clear.
The autonomous regions of Ceuta and Melilla are seen by Islamists as the opening fronts in their anticipated reconquest of Spain. Last year a North African group calling itself Nadim al-Magrebi warned of Âa holy war against the infidel Spanish state which has occupied the two cities. Al-QaedaÂs number two, Ayman Zawahiri, has called for Islamic land to be reconquered from ÂAl-Ãndalus to Iraq and compared the ÂSpanish occupation of Ceuta and Melilla to the Russian occupation of Chechnya and the Israeli occupation of Palestine.
And as can be seen in those two conflict zones, calling on Islamists to end the occupation of Âholy land inevitably leads to violence in the area. Gustavo de ArÃstegui, the Foreign Affairs Spokesman of the PP and author of The Jihad in Spain: The obsession to reconquer Al-Ãndalus, believes Islamists have already turned Ceuta and Melilla into Âlaboratories where they can Âtest all their theories concerning the reconquering of territory that they believe should be returned to Islamic rule.Â
Indeed, there are disturbing signs of a burgeoning intifada against Spanish rule in Ceuta. In their paper titled ÂFavorable situations for the jihadist recruitment: The neighborhood of PrÃncipe Alfonso (Ceuta, Spain), Javier Jordan and Humberto Trujillo of the University of Granada detail the full extent of Islamic radicalism in the border town.
Resembling the combustible suburbs of Paris, PrÃncipe Alfonso is essentially off-limits to the National Police and Guardia Civil except in emergency situations or during raids because of the risks officers face when entering the town. Recently the local police station and its lone police car were burned. Not only are ambushes of police cars common in PrÃncipe Alfonso, but emergency calls are frequently made in order to trap police officers. Shouts referring to the ÂIntifada of Ceuta are often heard during such ambushes. The resulting chaos has led to a situation where even the city buses cannot run safely.
The only authority in PrÃncipe Alfonso comes from Islamic extremists who are intent on imposing their Salafist interpretation of Islamic law. For example, boys are routinely castigated for playing games with girls on the street. Jordan and Trujillo suspect that Âmoral squads which intimidate or attack girls who donÂt wear the veil or men who drink alcohol in public may already exist. Moreover, the poverty of the city is blamed on Catholic rule.
These troubling social conditions, combined with the jihadist calls for the liberation of the Âoccupied enclaves, have turned Ceuta and Melilla into the principal targets of Islamist terrorism in Spain. The Guardia Civil has warned in an internal memo that Âsupport cells for Islamist terrorists exist in the two regions. Meanwhile, National Court Judge Baltasar Garzon recently told the daily La Vanguardia: ÂThe beaches of Ceuta and Melilla, first, and the (Iberian) Peninsula and continental Europe ... are preferred targets of the new terrorist strategy of Al Qaeda that is being developed in North Africa.Â
In fact, just last year a planned terrorist attack was disrupted in PrÃncipe Alfonso. Police in Ceuta dismantled a cell made up of at least 11 individuals in December. The members were charged with belonging to the Salafia Yihadia terrorist group which forms part of the Al-Qaeda network in North Africa. It now appears that the groupÂs plan to steal weapons and explosives from a local military base and carry out an attack during CeutaÂs annual festival had reached a mature phase.
Just as disturbing was the revelation that the individuals were in contact with Spanish soldiers of Moroccan origin from whom they hoped to obtain explosives and strategic information. Muslims make up approximately 30 percent of the Spanish forces in Ceuta and Melilla, and Jordan believes that the infiltration of jihadists into the Spanish army is a very real possibility. He notes that already Âmilitary intelligence has detected isolated cases of radical individuals whose contracts to continue serving in the Spanish army have not been renewed.Â
The Unión Democrática Ceutà (UDCE) -- the political party in Ceuta that receives most of the Muslim vote -- has strongly rejected the non-renewal of Muslim soldiers. In fact, at mosques throughout Ceuta the UDCE has distributed thousands of pamphlets denouncing the Âpersecution of the Spanish soldiers of the Muslim faith. Such victim mongering (which was also evident in the UDCEÂs aforementioned anti-PP pamphlet campaign) has become an effective way for Muslim groups to portray the legitimate terrorism concerns of Spaniards as nothing more than fear mongering.
This tactic can be seen in a recent article from Reuters (ÂTerrorism fears cause tension in Spanish enclaveÂ), in which the author accepts at face value the opinions of local Muslims that the Islamist threat in Ceuta is overestimated. The Reuters article supports the claim that in PrÃncipe Alfonso Âpeople are sick of what they describe as constant media depictions of Muslims as terrorists with quotes from local Muslims like Mohamed Ali, the leader of UDCE. ÂCeutaÂs Muslims have given ample proof that they are Spaniards, Ali says. He goes on to dispute the finding of the Elcano Institute (a Spanish think-tank) that 15 percent of Spanish Muslims sympathize with Al-Qaeda. (Polls conducted by the Pew Global Attitudes Survey and the US State DepartmentÂs Office confirm this percentage.) Moreover, Ali calls for Arabic to be made an official language in Ceuta and says that Muslims feel their loyalty to Spain is questioned. Here it would have been useful for Reuters to mention that Ali often describes Ceuta and Melilla as Âoccupied cities.Â
The deceptions of Muslim leaders like Ali belie a desire to make the city Muslim. Considering the fact that CeutaÂs Muslims number 27,000 out of a population of 71,500 and the likelihood that Muslims will become the majority in the next decade, there is a good chance that dream will soon become a reality. The concern for Spaniards is whether a Muslim Ceuta will be more loyal to Spain or to the Islamists intent on liberating it.
Aaron Hanscom is an essayist on Islamic terrorism.