Selangor Journal
A view of the city skyline in Singapore. — Picture by PEXELS

ISA: Singapore deals with youngest self radicalised person

SINGAPORE, Feb 21 — A self-radicalised 15-year old Singaporean was issued with an Order of Detention (OD), the youngest individual to-date dealt with the under the Internal Security Act (ISA) for terrorism-related activities here.

According to the republic’s Internal Security Department (ISD), the 15-year-old male was a Secondary Three student at the time of his arrest under ISA in November 2022 and was issued with the OD in December 2022.

“Investigations found that he was self-radicalised by online terrorist propaganda, and supportive of Al Qaeda (AQ) and ISIS,” said the department in a statement issued on the Ministry of Home Affairs’ website on Tuesday.

ISD said he had considered conducting attacks in Singapore, and harboured the desire to establish an Islamic caliphate through violent means.

“He is the youngest individual to-date dealt with under the ISA for terrorism-related activities,” said the department.

Prior to this, a 16-year-old male Singaporean who was detained under the ISA in December 2020 was the youngest to be dealt with under the ISA.

He was inspired by far-right extremist ideologies and had planned to conduct knife attacks against Muslims at two mosques in Singapore, it said.

ISD noted that, among others, the 15-year-old detainee will undergo intensive religious counselling with two religious counsellors from The Religious Rehabilitation Group (RRG) to address the religious misconceptions that led to his support for armed violence and terrorist groups such as Al-Qaeda.

Separately, a 16-year-old male Singaporean, a Secondary Four student, was issued with a Restriction Order (RO) under the ISA in January 2023.

ISD said investigations found that the youth had been self-radicalised by online ISIS propaganda, and believed in the use of armed violence to establish an Islamic caliphate.

The youth joined multiple ISIS-themed servers on online gaming platform Roblox, where the virtual game settings replicated physical ISIS conflict zones, such as those in Syria and Marawi city in southern Philippines.

“Extremist and terrorist groups are known to target youths for radicalisation and recruitment online as they may be more impressionable and easily influenced in their search for a sense of identity, purpose and belonging.

“Terrorist groups have also misused online gaming platforms, for example, by disseminating their ideological beliefs through video games, using in-game communication features to recruit vulnerable gamers, and appropriating gaming culture to increase their reach to younger target audiences,” said ISD.

The two youths were online contacts of 18-year-old Singaporean who was detained under the ISA in December 2022.

Since 2015, ISD said it has dealt with 11 self-radicalised Singaporean youths aged 20 or below under the ISA with all were radicalised online.

— Bernama

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