You are just cannon fodder for Daesh, Cameron warns youth

David Cameron looks at a computer as he speaks with a student during a workshop about ways to report suspicious on-line activity, at Ninestiles Academy in Birmingham, on Monday.

London - Cameron said the extremist ideology of the group must be countered so Britain becomes a more cohesive nation in which young Muslims feel they have a stake.

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By AP

Published: Tue 21 Jul 2015, 7:11 PM

Prime Minister David Cameron is launching a five-year plan to defeat extremism, saying it's time to counter the ideology that has attracted so many young people to the Daesh group.
In what is being billed as his most important speech on the subject, Cameron says the extremist ideology of the group, must be countered so Britain becomes a more cohesive nation in which young Muslims feel they have a stake.
Some communities in Britain have little attachment to the country and that makes them vulnerable to radicalisation, Cameron says, according to excerpts released by his office. He delivered a harsh warning to young people who might consider joining the group.
"You won't be some valued member of a movement. You are cannon fodder for them. They will use you," he will say. "If you are a boy, they will brainwash you, strap bombs to your body and blow you up. If you are a girl, they will enslave and abuse you. That is the sick and brutal reality of Daesh."
Cameron is expected to announce a study designed to find ways to increase opportunities for young people from ethnic minorities and increase their integration in society.
Cameron also takes on the sensitive question of the role Britain's Muslim community should play in fighting Daesh, saying extreme views and opposition to "fundamental liberal values" are the gateway to violence.
"There are so many strong, positive Muslim voices being drowned out," he says. "Ask yourself, how is it possible that when young teenagers leave their London homes to fight for Daesh, the debate focuses on whether the security services are to blame?" Police say some 700 potential suspects have travelled to Syria from UK. - AP

AP

Published: Tue 21 Jul 2015, 7:11 PM

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