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Islamic Armed Movement

The Islamic Armed Movement[note 1] was an Islamic guerrilla group and terrorist organization in northern Algeria in the 1980s and 90s.[1][2] The group was the largest and most broadly-based Algerian Islamic extremist organization of the 80's.[3] The group was founded by Mustafa Bouyali in 1981[4] or April 1982[5] or July 1982[6] after a confrontation with security services. The group, which carried out attacks against the government in the Larbaa region,[7] was a loose association of small groups of which Bouyali proclaimed himself the emir.[8] The group engaged in guerrilla warfare similar to the Maquis of WWII, and was based in the rural areas of the Atlas Mountains and the Blida District as it provided the ideal terrain for extremist groups, specifically targeting the Mitidja.[9][10] Bouyali originally was a preacher at the El-Achour Mosque in Algiers where he had gained a following. In 1979 or 81' he formed the Group for Defense Against the Illicit, pressuring the government to implement Islamic law and to adopt policies that reflected "real" Muslim values.[11] This group attacked bars and individuals, but had no real power, so Bouyali decided to turn to armed struggle.[12] He was relentlessly harassed by security services though, due to his speaking out against the regime and his support for an Islamic state.

Mustafa Bouyali, the leader of the MIA from 1982-87

In July 1982, the MIA made its first bomb, however the group's activities were noticed by authorities when they experiment with it. On October 3, Bouyali escaped a kidnapping attempt by agents of the military's security. This caused him to go into hiding; in January 1983, he hid with Hadi Hamoudi [ar] near Bouguerra Mountain near El Aouinet.[13][14] On November 12, 1982, Bouyali and four others fired for the first time at security forces at a police roadblock in Oued Romane, near El-Achour. Then they attacked a depot of a state company and stole 160 kilos of TNT. Bouyali and others then tested a new bomb on an Algiers beach and stole explosives near Cap Djinet. Due to these activities, a warrant was issued against Bouyali on December 10, 1982. In January 1983, Bouyali's brother was mistakenly killed in the crossfire of a shootout leaving his house. The death of his brother served as an important catalyst for his later increasing violent actions. In early 1983, possibly February or March, Bouyali met with Hadi Khadiri, the police chief and Minister of the Interior, although the meeting was a failure and did not stop Bouyali's campaign. Sometime in the early stages of the group, Bouyali sent the authorities a memorandum in thirteen parts and created a ninety-nine part guide with the aim of creating an Islamic republic in Algeria.[15]

The group often attracted unemployed young men because "its rhetoric evoked 'memories of the bandits of honor in the mountains, paralleling the life of the Prophet and drawing on the original war of liberation'".[16] One of Bouyali's supporters was Ali Benhadj, the man who would go onto be the vice-president of the FIS.[17] In 1983, the Bouyali group attacked a production unit in Ain Naadja, Algiers and stole the workers salaries.[18] In 1983, the MIA also recruited many new members due to the release of a hundred Islamist prisoners in May 1983.[15] On April 12, 1984, Sheikh Soltani [fr] died in his home during house arrest. The next day without any government mention of his death, a large Islamic gathering of 25,000 appeared at his funeral in Kouba.[19] In the wake of this demonstration, the trial of a large group of Islamists scheduled for May 13 was called off and instead, a group of 92 political prisoners were released.[20] Although many of his companions were acquitted, Bouyali was charged in absentia at that same trial and sentenced to death.[21] On the night of August 21, 1985, Bouyali and his militants robbed a DNC (state-owned enterprise) factory in Aïn-Naadja of ₤110,000[22] or one million dinars[15] and on August 26-27,[note 2] 1985, MIA insurgents headed by Bouyali, attacked a police school in Soumaâ, killing an officer and seizing 340 weapons, and more than 18,000 pieces of ammunition.[25] In 1986, Bouyali organized clandestine cells, composed of veteran mujahideen members from Afghanistan.[26] The group of several hundred militants lasted for 5 years, until Bouyali was killed on January or February 3, 1987, (most likely January 3) when police received information from Bouyali's driver.[20][27] Bouyali and 5 others were driving in the mountains near Larbaa when the driver flashed on his lights and shots rang out from both sides of the road. Bouyali's final act was to shoot the driver in the head seconds before he was killed by a bullet to the forehead.[28] All 6 including the driver were killed in the final clashes as well as a policeman who was the head of the elite security forces.[29] Other sources also say that he was killed while in a confrontation with the gendarme in an Algeirs suburb.

Other important MIA members such as Abdelkader Chebouti and Mansouri Meliani were sentenced to death and subsequently jailed, but released in 1989 and pardoned in 1990 due to political reforms.[30] Meliani would later be arrested in July 1992 and executed in 1993 after he and Chebouti were captured after a battle in Ashour, a few hundred meters from Bouyali's unmarked grave. After the death of Bouyali, the MIA effectively fell apart and most members were arrested. On June 15, or 20, 1987, the largest trial of Algerian Islamists started, with 202 defendants and four in absentia represented by a 49 man defense council. On July 10, four were sentenced to death, seven to twelve years, 166 to between one and 15 years and 15 were acquitted.[20]

Rebirth edit

In March and April 1992, after the Algerian coup, Abdelkader Chebouti, along with Said Makhloufi, a former Algerian propaganda officer and Azzedin Baa, re-established the MIA with ex-Bouyalists and other affiliated group members.[31] There is disagreement about the identity of the founders though; some sources say Makhloufi founded the Islamic State Movement (MEI) in 1993[32] while others say the MEI was founded by Meliani in early 92' while others still refer to Chebouti's group as the Islamic State Movement.[33] Other sources even say that Chebouti died in 1992, under 'suspicous circumstances'.[34][35] This group created the foundation for resistance leading to the Algerian Civil War as veterans of the MIA were the ones that launched the armed rebellion in 1992. The membership of the group varied, government forces said in April 1993 that there were 175 guerilla fighters (most of the them MIA) with about 925 supporters although this number is thought to be a gross understatement with the true number as high as 10 or 15 thousand.[3] A report on the Middle East in July 1993 reported the MIA to have around 1000 fighters who targeted security forces personnel and low level civil servants.[36] In May 1992, five army battalions were mobilized against a MIA-affiliated group in a remote region near Lakhdaria. The group had planned to use its base to attack security forces and other targets in the region. Abdelkader Chebouti was also reported to have established a camp to shelter Islamist army deserters.[37] The MIA later became the AIS in 1994 when it renamed to seem more brutal in comparison to the GIA.[38] In January 1993, Ali Benhadj issued a fatwa from his prison cell granting the MIA the number two spot in the FIS, after the GIA.[8] While 'General' Chebouti was the supreme leader of the AIS in name, but Makhloufi effectively ran the group due to Chebouti's chronic illness. The relationship between the AIS and GIA fluctuated but most stayed peaceful as the two groups operated in parallel until March of 1994 when the GIA 'liquidated' 70 MIA fighters who it suspected had ties to the regime. In August the AIS retaliated and killed a local GIA emir and members of his family in the Bilda plain.

References edit

  1. ^ Also called Algerian Islamic Armed Movement or Armed Islamic Movement (MIA, from French: Mouvement Islamique Armé; Arabic: الحركة الإسلامية المسلحة, romanizedHarakat El Islamiyyat El Musallaha)
  2. ^ The most likely time for this attack was the night of the 26th[23][24] Other sources report it was on the 25th[20] or the 29th[6]
  1. ^ "What Algeria 1992 can, and cannot, teach us about Egypt 2013". openDemocracy. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  2. ^ Ufheil-Somers, Amanda (1994-07-15). "Algeria Between Eradicators and Conciliators". MERIP. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  3. ^ a b Stone, Martin (1997). The agony of Algeria. London: Hurst & Co. ISBN 1-85065-175-2. OCLC 37929276.
  4. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | Islamism, the State and Armed Conflict". Refworld. Retrieved 2023-03-28.
  5. ^ "Algeria: Bloody Past and Fractious Factions | Wilson Center". www.wilsoncenter.org. Retrieved 2023-03-28.
  6. ^ a b "30. Algeria (1962-present)". uca.edu. Retrieved 2023-03-28.
  7. ^ Islam and Islamic groups : a worldwide reference guide. Farzana Shaikh. Harlow, Essex, U.K.: Longman Group UK. 1992. ISBN 0-582-09146-2. OCLC 28426753.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  8. ^ a b Kepel, Gilles (2002). Jihad : the trail of political Islam. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-00877-4. OCLC 48851110.
  9. ^ http://graphics8.nytimes.com/packages/pdf/world/moss_algeria_kohlman.pdf
  10. ^ "WOMEN BATTLE FOR THEIR RIGHTS IN ALGERIAN CITY". Sun Sentinel. 13 May 1990. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  11. ^ Tamburini, Francesco (March 2022). "Who Controls the Past Controls the Future: How Algeria Manipulated History and Legitimated Power Using its Constitutional Charters and Legislation". Journal of Asian and African Studies. 57 (2): 226–246. doi:10.1177/00219096211013416. ISSN 0021-9096. S2CID 236627462.
  12. ^ Democratic development & political terrorism : the global perspective. William J. Crotty. Boston: Northeastern University Press. 2005. ISBN 1-55553-625-5. OCLC 55511266.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  13. ^ "Islamist Bouali's brother: Mustapha Bouali chose to run away because he did not trust regime". Echorouk. December 16, 2012.
  14. ^ ISSAfrica.org. "Chapter 2: Terrorism in Algeria". ISS Africa. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  15. ^ a b c Charef, Abed (1994). Algérie : le grand dérapage. Impr. SEPC). La Tour-d'Aigues: Éd. de l'Aube. ISBN 2-87678-196-4. OCLC 417235468.
  16. ^ Zhang, Chuchu (September 2018). "Islamist Party Mobilization: Tunisia's Ennahda and Algeria's HMS Compared, 1989-2014" (PDF). University of Cambridge: 224.
  17. ^ Naylor, Phillip Chiviges (2006). Historical dictionary of Algeria (3rd ed.). Lanham, Md.: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0-8108-5340-X. OCLC 67922291.
  18. ^ Trauma, war, and violence : public mental health in socio-cultural context. Joop T. V. M. de Jong. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers. 2002. ISBN 0-306-47675-4. OCLC 51933200.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  19. ^ Sivan, Emmanuel (1995-03-01). "Eavesdropping on Radical Islam". Middle East Quarterly.
  20. ^ a b c d Roberts, Hugh (2017). The battlefield : Algeria 1988-2002 : studies in a broken polity. [London]: Verso. ISBN 978-1-78663-063-6. OCLC 972140518.
  21. ^ Various (2021). Routledge library editions. Iran. Mini-set D. (1st ed.). London. ISBN 978-1-136-81285-9. OCLC 1295119778.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  22. ^ Zhang, Chuchu (2019-07-19). Islamist Party Mobilization: Tunisia's Ennahda and Algeria's HMS Compared, 1989–2014. Springer. ISBN 978-981-13-9487-4.
  23. ^ Willis, Michael J. (1997). The Islamist challenge in Algeria : a political history. Washington Square, N.Y.: New York University Press. ISBN 0-8147-9328-2. OCLC 36649104.
  24. ^ admin (2014-10-11). "الجماعات المسلحة في الجزائر من "بويعلي" إلى "جند الخلافة"!". القدس العربي (in Arabic). Retrieved 2023-03-28.
  25. ^ Jazairy, Idriss (2004-01-01). "Terrorism: An Algerian Perspective". Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business. 4 (1): 11–20.
  26. ^ Coolsaet, R. (2008). Jihadi Terrorism and the Radicalisation Challenge in Europe. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7546-7217-3.
  27. ^ "Algeria: Bloody Past and Fractious Factions | Wilson Center". www.wilsoncenter.org. Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  28. ^ Fisk, Robert (2007). The great war for civilisation : the conquest of the Middle East (1st Vintage books ed.). New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-1-4000-7517-1. OCLC 84904295.
  29. ^ admin (2014-10-11). "الجماعات المسلحة في الجزائر من "بويعلي" إلى "جند الخلافة"!". القدس العربي (in Arabic). Retrieved 2023-03-29.
  30. ^ Hafez, Mohammed M. (2000). "Armed Islamist Movements and Political Violence in Algeria". Middle East Journal. 54 (4): 572–591. ISSN 0026-3141. JSTOR 4329544.
  31. ^ Roberts, Hugh (1995). "The Islamists, the Democratic Opposition and the Search for a Political Solution in Algeria". Review of African Political Economy. 22 (64): 237–244. doi:10.1080/03056249508704124. ISSN 0305-6244. JSTOR 4006320.
  32. ^ Martínez, Luis (1998). La guerre civile en Algérie, 1990-1998. Paris: Karthala. ISBN 2-86537-832-2. OCLC 39293977.
  33. ^ Hafez, Mohammed M. (February 2003). "CAMILLE AL-TAWIL, Al-Haraka Al-Islamiyya Al-Musalaha fi Al-Jazair: Min "Al-Inqadth" ila "Al-Jamaעa" (The Armed Islamic Movement in Algeria: From the FIS to the GIA) (Beirut: Dar al-Nihar, 1998). Pp. 337. KHALED HROUB, Hamas: Political Thought and Practice (Washington, D.C.: Institute for Palestine Studies, 2000). Pp. 343. $29.95 cloth. QUINTAN WIKTOROWICZ, The Management of Islamic Activism: Salafis, the Muslim Brotherhood, and State Power in Jordan (Albany: State University of New York Press, 2001). Pp. 216. 18.95 paper". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 35 (1): 175–178. doi:10.1017/S0020743803390075. ISSN 1471-6380.
  34. ^ Le Moign, Alix (November 2016). The Sociology of Organisations Applied ton Non-State Armed Groups (PDF). ISBN 978-2-11-151016-6. ISSN 2268-3194. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  35. ^     Entelis, John P. Professor of Political Science and Co-Director of the Middle East Studies Program at Fordham University, Bronx, New York. 27 March 1995. Telephone interview
  36. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | Islamism, the State and Armed Conflict". Refworld. Retrieved 2023-03-30.
  37. ^ Cite error: The named reference auto22 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  38. ^ Hafez, Mohammed M. (2020-04-02). "Fratricidal Rebels: Ideological Extremity and Warring Factionalism in Civil Wars". Terrorism and Political Violence. 32 (3): 604–629. doi:10.1080/09546553.2017.1389726. ISSN 0954-6553. S2CID 149107368.

islamic, armed, movement, note, islamic, guerrilla, group, terrorist, organization, northern, algeria, 1980s, group, largest, most, broadly, based, algerian, islamic, extremist, organization, group, founded, mustafa, bouyali, 1981, april, 1982, july, 1982, aft. The Islamic Armed Movement note 1 was an Islamic guerrilla group and terrorist organization in northern Algeria in the 1980s and 90s 1 2 The group was the largest and most broadly based Algerian Islamic extremist organization of the 80 s 3 The group was founded by Mustafa Bouyali in 1981 4 or April 1982 5 or July 1982 6 after a confrontation with security services The group which carried out attacks against the government in the Larbaa region 7 was a loose association of small groups of which Bouyali proclaimed himself the emir 8 The group engaged in guerrilla warfare similar to the Maquis of WWII and was based in the rural areas of the Atlas Mountains and the Blida District as it provided the ideal terrain for extremist groups specifically targeting the Mitidja 9 10 Bouyali originally was a preacher at the El Achour Mosque in Algiers where he had gained a following In 1979 or 81 he formed the Group for Defense Against the Illicit pressuring the government to implement Islamic law and to adopt policies that reflected real Muslim values 11 This group attacked bars and individuals but had no real power so Bouyali decided to turn to armed struggle 12 He was relentlessly harassed by security services though due to his speaking out against the regime and his support for an Islamic state Mustafa Bouyali the leader of the MIA from 1982 87In July 1982 the MIA made its first bomb however the group s activities were noticed by authorities when they experiment with it On October 3 Bouyali escaped a kidnapping attempt by agents of the military s security This caused him to go into hiding in January 1983 he hid with Hadi Hamoudi ar near Bouguerra Mountain near El Aouinet 13 14 On November 12 1982 Bouyali and four others fired for the first time at security forces at a police roadblock in Oued Romane near El Achour Then they attacked a depot of a state company and stole 160 kilos of TNT Bouyali and others then tested a new bomb on an Algiers beach and stole explosives near Cap Djinet Due to these activities a warrant was issued against Bouyali on December 10 1982 In January 1983 Bouyali s brother was mistakenly killed in the crossfire of a shootout leaving his house The death of his brother served as an important catalyst for his later increasing violent actions In early 1983 possibly February or March Bouyali met with Hadi Khadiri the police chief and Minister of the Interior although the meeting was a failure and did not stop Bouyali s campaign Sometime in the early stages of the group Bouyali sent the authorities a memorandum in thirteen parts and created a ninety nine part guide with the aim of creating an Islamic republic in Algeria 15 The group often attracted unemployed young men because its rhetoric evoked memories of the bandits of honor in the mountains paralleling the life of the Prophet and drawing on the original war of liberation 16 One of Bouyali s supporters was Ali Benhadj the man who would go onto be the vice president of the FIS 17 In 1983 the Bouyali group attacked a production unit in Ain Naadja Algiers and stole the workers salaries 18 In 1983 the MIA also recruited many new members due to the release of a hundred Islamist prisoners in May 1983 15 On April 12 1984 Sheikh Soltani fr died in his home during house arrest The next day without any government mention of his death a large Islamic gathering of 25 000 appeared at his funeral in Kouba 19 In the wake of this demonstration the trial of a large group of Islamists scheduled for May 13 was called off and instead a group of 92 political prisoners were released 20 Although many of his companions were acquitted Bouyali was charged in absentia at that same trial and sentenced to death 21 On the night of August 21 1985 Bouyali and his militants robbed a DNC state owned enterprise factory in Ain Naadja of 110 000 22 or one million dinars 15 and on August 26 27 note 2 1985 MIA insurgents headed by Bouyali attacked a police school in Soumaa killing an officer and seizing 340 weapons and more than 18 000 pieces of ammunition 25 In 1986 Bouyali organized clandestine cells composed of veteran mujahideen members from Afghanistan 26 The group of several hundred militants lasted for 5 years until Bouyali was killed on January or February 3 1987 most likely January 3 when police received information from Bouyali s driver 20 27 Bouyali and 5 others were driving in the mountains near Larbaa when the driver flashed on his lights and shots rang out from both sides of the road Bouyali s final act was to shoot the driver in the head seconds before he was killed by a bullet to the forehead 28 All 6 including the driver were killed in the final clashes as well as a policeman who was the head of the elite security forces 29 Other sources also say that he was killed while in a confrontation with the gendarme in an Algeirs suburb Other important MIA members such as Abdelkader Chebouti and Mansouri Meliani were sentenced to death and subsequently jailed but released in 1989 and pardoned in 1990 due to political reforms 30 Meliani would later be arrested in July 1992 and executed in 1993 after he and Chebouti were captured after a battle in Ashour a few hundred meters from Bouyali s unmarked grave After the death of Bouyali the MIA effectively fell apart and most members were arrested On June 15 or 20 1987 the largest trial of Algerian Islamists started with 202 defendants and four in absentia represented by a 49 man defense council On July 10 four were sentenced to death seven to twelve years 166 to between one and 15 years and 15 were acquitted 20 Rebirth editIn March and April 1992 after the Algerian coup Abdelkader Chebouti along with Said Makhloufi a former Algerian propaganda officer and Azzedin Baa re established the MIA with ex Bouyalists and other affiliated group members 31 There is disagreement about the identity of the founders though some sources say Makhloufi founded the Islamic State Movement MEI in 1993 32 while others say the MEI was founded by Meliani in early 92 while others still refer to Chebouti s group as the Islamic State Movement 33 Other sources even say that Chebouti died in 1992 under suspicous circumstances 34 35 This group created the foundation for resistance leading to the Algerian Civil War as veterans of the MIA were the ones that launched the armed rebellion in 1992 The membership of the group varied government forces said in April 1993 that there were 175 guerilla fighters most of the them MIA with about 925 supporters although this number is thought to be a gross understatement with the true number as high as 10 or 15 thousand 3 A report on the Middle East in July 1993 reported the MIA to have around 1000 fighters who targeted security forces personnel and low level civil servants 36 In May 1992 five army battalions were mobilized against a MIA affiliated group in a remote region near Lakhdaria The group had planned to use its base to attack security forces and other targets in the region Abdelkader Chebouti was also reported to have established a camp to shelter Islamist army deserters 37 The MIA later became the AIS in 1994 when it renamed to seem more brutal in comparison to the GIA 38 In January 1993 Ali Benhadj issued a fatwa from his prison cell granting the MIA the number two spot in the FIS after the GIA 8 While General Chebouti was the supreme leader of the AIS in name but Makhloufi effectively ran the group due to Chebouti s chronic illness The relationship between the AIS and GIA fluctuated but most stayed peaceful as the two groups operated in parallel until March of 1994 when the GIA liquidated 70 MIA fighters who it suspected had ties to the regime In August the AIS retaliated and killed a local GIA emir and members of his family in the Bilda plain References edit Also called Algerian Islamic Armed Movement or Armed Islamic Movement MIA from French Mouvement Islamique Arme Arabic الحركة الإسلامية المسلحة romanized Harakat El Islamiyyat El Musallaha The most likely time for this attack was the night of the 26th 23 24 Other sources report it was on the 25th 20 or the 29th 6 What Algeria 1992 can and cannot teach us about Egypt 2013 openDemocracy Retrieved 2023 03 29 Ufheil Somers Amanda 1994 07 15 Algeria Between Eradicators and Conciliators MERIP Retrieved 2023 03 29 a b Stone Martin 1997 The agony of Algeria London Hurst amp Co ISBN 1 85065 175 2 OCLC 37929276 Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Refworld Islamism the State and Armed Conflict Refworld Retrieved 2023 03 28 Algeria Bloody Past and Fractious Factions Wilson Center www wilsoncenter org Retrieved 2023 03 28 a b 30 Algeria 1962 present uca edu Retrieved 2023 03 28 Islam and Islamic groups a worldwide reference guide Farzana Shaikh Harlow Essex U K Longman Group UK 1992 ISBN 0 582 09146 2 OCLC 28426753 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Kepel Gilles 2002 Jihad the trail of political Islam Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 0 674 00877 4 OCLC 48851110 http graphics8 nytimes com packages pdf world moss algeria kohlman pdf WOMEN BATTLE FOR THEIR RIGHTS IN ALGERIAN CITY Sun Sentinel 13 May 1990 Retrieved 2023 03 29 Tamburini Francesco March 2022 Who Controls the Past Controls the Future How Algeria Manipulated History and Legitimated Power Using its Constitutional Charters and Legislation Journal of Asian and African Studies 57 2 226 246 doi 10 1177 00219096211013416 ISSN 0021 9096 S2CID 236627462 Democratic development amp political terrorism the global perspective William J Crotty Boston Northeastern University Press 2005 ISBN 1 55553 625 5 OCLC 55511266 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Islamist Bouali s brother Mustapha Bouali chose to run away because he did not trust regime Echorouk December 16 2012 ISSAfrica org Chapter 2 Terrorism in Algeria ISS Africa Retrieved 2023 03 29 a b c Charef Abed 1994 Algerie le grand derapage Impr SEPC La Tour d Aigues Ed de l Aube ISBN 2 87678 196 4 OCLC 417235468 Zhang Chuchu September 2018 Islamist Party Mobilization Tunisia s Ennahda and Algeria s HMS Compared 1989 2014 PDF University of Cambridge 224 Naylor Phillip Chiviges 2006 Historical dictionary of Algeria 3rd ed Lanham Md Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 5340 X OCLC 67922291 Trauma war and violence public mental health in socio cultural context Joop T V M de Jong New York Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers 2002 ISBN 0 306 47675 4 OCLC 51933200 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Sivan Emmanuel 1995 03 01 Eavesdropping on Radical Islam Middle East Quarterly a b c d Roberts Hugh 2017 The battlefield Algeria 1988 2002 studies in a broken polity London Verso ISBN 978 1 78663 063 6 OCLC 972140518 Various 2021 Routledge library editions Iran Mini set D 1st ed London ISBN 978 1 136 81285 9 OCLC 1295119778 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Zhang Chuchu 2019 07 19 Islamist Party Mobilization Tunisia s Ennahda and Algeria s HMS Compared 1989 2014 Springer ISBN 978 981 13 9487 4 Willis Michael J 1997 The Islamist challenge in Algeria a political history Washington Square N Y New York University Press ISBN 0 8147 9328 2 OCLC 36649104 admin 2014 10 11 الجماعات المسلحة في الجزائر من بويعلي إلى جند الخلافة القدس العربي in Arabic Retrieved 2023 03 28 Jazairy Idriss 2004 01 01 Terrorism An Algerian Perspective Richmond Journal of Global Law amp Business 4 1 11 20 Coolsaet R 2008 Jihadi Terrorism and the Radicalisation Challenge in Europe Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 0 7546 7217 3 Algeria Bloody Past and Fractious Factions Wilson Center www wilsoncenter org Retrieved 2023 03 29 Fisk Robert 2007 The great war for civilisation the conquest of the Middle East 1st Vintage books ed New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 1 4000 7517 1 OCLC 84904295 admin 2014 10 11 الجماعات المسلحة في الجزائر من بويعلي إلى جند الخلافة القدس العربي in Arabic Retrieved 2023 03 29 Hafez Mohammed M 2000 Armed Islamist Movements and Political Violence in Algeria Middle East Journal 54 4 572 591 ISSN 0026 3141 JSTOR 4329544 Roberts Hugh 1995 The Islamists the Democratic Opposition and the Search for a Political Solution in Algeria Review of African Political Economy 22 64 237 244 doi 10 1080 03056249508704124 ISSN 0305 6244 JSTOR 4006320 Martinez Luis 1998 La guerre civile en Algerie 1990 1998 Paris Karthala ISBN 2 86537 832 2 OCLC 39293977 Hafez Mohammed M February 2003 CAMILLE AL TAWIL Al Haraka Al Islamiyya Al Musalaha fi Al Jazair Min Al Inqadth ila Al Jamaעa The Armed Islamic Movement in Algeria From the FIS to the GIA Beirut Dar al Nihar 1998 Pp 337 KHALED HROUB Hamas Political Thought and Practice Washington D C Institute for Palestine Studies 2000 Pp 343 29 95 cloth QUINTAN WIKTOROWICZ The Management of Islamic Activism Salafis the Muslim Brotherhood and State Power in Jordan Albany State University of New York Press 2001 Pp 216 18 95 paper International Journal of Middle East Studies 35 1 175 178 doi 10 1017 S0020743803390075 ISSN 1471 6380 Le Moign Alix November 2016 The Sociology of Organisations Applied ton Non State Armed Groups PDF ISBN 978 2 11 151016 6 ISSN 2268 3194 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Entelis John P Professor of Political Science and Co Director of the Middle East Studies Program at Fordham University Bronx New York 27 March 1995 Telephone interview Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Refworld Islamism the State and Armed Conflict Refworld Retrieved 2023 03 30 Cite error The named reference auto22 was invoked but never defined see the help page Hafez Mohammed M 2020 04 02 Fratricidal Rebels Ideological Extremity and Warring Factionalism in Civil Wars Terrorism and Political Violence 32 3 604 629 doi 10 1080 09546553 2017 1389726 ISSN 0954 6553 S2CID 149107368 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islamic Armed Movement amp oldid 1178789315, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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