Female suicide bomber explained

Female suicide bombers are women who intend to do suicide attack, wherein the bomber kills herself while simultaneously killing targeted people. Suicide bombers are normally viewed as male political radicals but since the 1960s female suicide attacks have been on the rise. Through 1985–2006, 15% of all suicide attacks were conducted by female suicide bombers.[1] There are many organizations, such as Boko Haram (which is the first group to use females in a majority of their suicide bombings and surpassed the Tamil Tigers in using more female suicide-bombers than any other terrorist group in history),[2] ISIS, and the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigade, that recently started using women as tools in their attacks, since they are normally viewed as less of a threat than their male counterparts. This includes women having the element of surprise, a hesitancy to search females, increased publicity for female suicide bombing attacks, and the female stereotype as non-violent.[3]

Background

Women have an extensive and complex history in political violence. While the typical terrorist of the 1960s tended to be an educated male from an upper-middle-class background, many left-wing terrorist groups in the 1960s and 1970s had prominent women active within these groups. Ulrike Meinhof, a German left-wing terrorist and journalist, co-founded the Red Army Faction and participated in a range of bombings and bank robberies. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP)'s Leila Khaled is considered to be the first women to hijack an airplane, drawing international attention.[4] Fusako Shigenobu founded and led the Japanese Red Army, a communist militant group that conducted hijackings and massacres. A number of Italian women were active in Italian terrorist organizations between 1970–1984.[5] Females played fundamental roles in Puerto Rican nationalist movements such as the Puerto Rican Armed Forces of National Liberation (FLAN) and the Boricua Popular Army (Los Macheteros), two groups designated as terrorist organizations. Women served visible roles in American groups, such as the Symbionese Liberation Army. Women also served as mobilizing agents for Weather Underground, recruiting people into the organization.[6] Women have been more active in left-wing groups as these groups' ideologies tend to be more conducive to women's participation in combatant and other non-traditional roles.[7]

Organizations have differing stances on female suicide bombers. For example, in 2002, the spiritual leader of Hamas "categorically renounced the use of women as suicide bombers." In fact, in early 2002, he reported that "Hamas was far from enthusiastic about the inclusion of women in warfare, for reasons of modesty." This stance shifted in 2004, when the first female suicide bomber was used. Officials exclaimed that the act was a "significant evolution in our fight. The male fighters face many obstacles... women are like the reserve army―when there is a necessity, we use them." The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam attracted thousands of women and their militarization shaped women's identity from the "traditional ideal of the auspicious, fecund wife to the androgynous Armed Virgin."[8] Rajini Thiranagama stated, "One cannot but be inspired when one sees the women of the LTTE in the night with their AKs slung over the shoulder. ... One cannot but admire the dedication and toughness of their training. … One could see the nationalist fervor and the romantic vision of women in arms defending the nation."

Characteristics of female suicide bombers

There is much variation among female suicide bombers. A number of studies have attempted to compare suicide attackers across different suicide groups. It was found that groups that used women the least were Islamist fundamentalist groups. When dealing with age, female suicide bombers followed the same age trend as males, typically falling within the early to mid 20s.[9] They also tend to have more secular ties than presumed. Some are married while others are widows. Socioeconomic status also varies among female attackers.

Women's involvement is mediated differently than men's; they are more likely to be involved through personal contacts or family members, while men's process of involvement is more likely to stem from movement affiliation and disenchantment with nonviolent forms of political activism.[5] Differences in men and women's need for revenge (and subsequent use of suicide attacks) has been studied, with inconsistent findings reported. Some argue men are more vengeful than women, while others find no such claims.[10]

Examples

Causes and reasons

There are a number of reasons as to why female suicide bombers are used by groups. Terrorists use bombers as they are cheaper than purchasing arms. They are considered a low risk weapon and require low technology.[35] They do not require much training, do not leave much of a trace behind, have the element of surprise, have easier access to targeted populations as well as soft targets, and tend to frighten the general population. As female combatants are seen as less likely to engage in lethal actions and can thus avoid suspicion, they are regarded as ideal combatants.[36] Dress and gender stereotypes are often utilized by women to bypass security defenses. For example, women who appear pregnant appropriate related expectations and stereotypes to their benefit, discouraging invasive body searchers.[37] Women may also "westernize" their appearance in an attempt at covering their actions and avoiding detection. Women are also deployed as suicide bombers as they tend to "elicit greater public sympathy and publicity for an organization." By some research, female bombers receive eight times more press coverage than their male counterparts.

Insurgent groups also face pressure when it comes to recruiting members, causing the group to expand their bases to sustain the group's position. It has been argued that the introduction of women and girls into combat "generally came about in response to logistical demands: the mounting number of casualties, the intensified crackdowns by government, and the ability to escape detection more easily than men."[38] An example of this was in January 2002 when Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the spiritual leader of Hamas, renounced the use of female bombers. Later on in the same year, Hamas was not enthusiastic about adding women into their ranks. Then in January 2004, Hamas used their first female suicide bomber. Hamas defense to this was evolution of their fight. Citing easier access to reach targets, Hamas stated that women are the reserve army. When there is a need they will use them. On average, it is calculated that terrorist groups that use suicide bombing as a tactic wait around 13.5 years before employing women. However, women are reported to have higher kill rates than men, on average killing four times as many people as men do.

Terrorist and insurgent groups may also appropriate media coverage to benefit from the portrayal of female suicide bombers. Women's media portrayal may help various organizations recruit and motivate men, and coverage of women in the media allows groups to differentiate themselves from one another.[39] It also may help deliver group-based messages. For example, media coverage may highlight that the group, by using women, had been driven to extreme measures. Media attention on female suicide bombers tends to examine emotional explanations for women's involvement, as opposed to ideological justifications.

Individual motivations

There are different causes and reasons why female suicide bombers perform these deadly actions. For one, many cite personal feelings of sacrifice in conducting such missions. The missions become more esteemed to the public when they are framed as forms of sacrifice. Society would be "hard pressed to accept, that a female who offers her life in this context is seen as engaging in the most profound form of selflessness."[38] Other research suggests that women resort to terrorism to "redeem their fallen reputations, such as being barren, divorced, defiled, unchaste, and so on."[40] Struggling for the pursuit of freedom through the LTTE can be seen as a way in which women can redeem themselves. Tamil rape victims tend to be prohibited from marriage and childbearing. Conceptualizing female bombers as mothers allows suicide bombings to serve as offerings for women who cannot become mothers.[41]

In the literature on female suicide bombers, exploitation of women is a distinctive factor that separates them from male suicide bombers. Research has examined cases of women's exploitation by their own families, often for monetary compensation.[42]

Women can also be motivated by political/and or historical contexts to take action against their enemy. For example, in the context of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, it has been noted that Palestinian female suicide bombers are often motivated by anti-Zionism and the Israeli occupation of their homeland to take action. According to Palestinian legal scholar Noura Erakat, the "Israeli military occupation [is] a significant, if not the most significant, factor contributing to the subjugation of Palestinian women's rights."[43] They are often motivated by the politics of their environment to take action in this situation. Western feminist critic Amal Amireh notes examples of how the women exercise their political agency in the conflict, including the fact that the bomber often declares in public her political group and nationalism, as well as the fact that they commit the act in public as a spectacle to be observed.[44] There is also a case to be made toward religion/political indoctrination. Some recruiters, like the LTTE, would concentrate on recruiting orphans due to their young age, making it much easier to indoctrinate and condition.

Individual motivations to become suicide bombers vary. Motives include "to avenge a personal loss, to redeem the family name, to escape a life of sheltered monotony and achieve fame, or to equalize the patriarchal societies in which they live." The death of a relative triggers the decision to commit a suicide attack. Some women join to seek revenge. For example, studies have shown that some women join the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam seeking revenge against crimes the government has committed against the group, from disappearances to torture. Government oppression has only emboldened the LTTE, and women have increasingly become more publicly involved.

In Chechnya, female bombers originally became involved for more personal reasons, avenging the deaths of Chechen male relatives killed by Russian forces. They are referred to as "Black Widows" because many were the wives, mothers, sisters, or female relatives of men killed in battle. The activities of the Black Widows are regarded to support the theory that suicide bombings may alter societal gender norms. With militant involvement usually seen as being performed by men, engaging in violent actions counters notions of women's traditional roles, such as raising children. Clara Beyler, a counter-terrorism analyst writes that "There is a difference between men and women suicide attackers: women consider combat as a way to escape the predestined life that is expected of them. When women become human bombs, their intent is to make a statement not only in the name of a country, a religion, a leader, but also in the name of their gender."[45]

Effects

Deadliness

According to a 2021 study, female suicide attacks "are more deadly in countries where women are largely absent from the workforce, civil society, and protest organizations." However, "female attack lethality is declining with time, suggesting that security forces eventually adapt to women's participation in terrorism."[46]

Organizations of female suicide bombers

The Al-Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades is a known terrorist organization that has trained many female suicide bombers since their uprising as political weapons. In January 2002, the group claimed responsibility for the first female suicide bombing attack inside of Israel, in efforts to push Israel settlers out of West Bank and to form an entirely Palestinian state. The group is known to be most active in the Gaza Strip, but also attacks inside of Israel and the West Bank.

Chechnya

The Shahidka, commonly referred to as the "Black Widows" are a group of Islamist Chechen separatist suicide bombers. Khava Barayeva blew herself up at a Russian Army outpost on June 7, 2000. In 2001,[47] Aiza Gazuyeva killed Russian general Gaidar Gadzhiyev in a suicide bombing, the first female suicide bombing of the Chechen insurgency.[48] The group carried out the Moscow theater hostage crisis and a number of them were involved in the Beslan school siege. A bombing that killed 10 people at Rizhskaya metro station in Moscow was thought to be carried out by a woman who was identified as a Beslan school captor. The 2004 Russian aircraft bombings are believed to be carried out by female bombers. Two of the perpetrators of the 2010 Moscow Metro bombings were women; Dzhanet Abdullayeva, who was married to a militant, and Maryam Sharipova.[13] The October 2013 Volgograd bus bombing was carried out by a woman.

Palestinian bombers

On the same day Darine Abu Aisha committed a suicide bombing, Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the religious leader of Islamist militant group Hamas, issued a fatwa, or religious rule, that gave permission to women to participate in suicide attacks as well as listing the rewards in "paradise" that these female martyrs would receive upon their deaths. He also promised Hamas would send many female suicide bombers in order to strike Israelis. Reactions to this in the Islamic world were mixed. While many hailed the female suicide bomber and urged full involvement of all in Jihad, some criticized the cruelty of tearing mothers from their children and sending them to explode themselves.

Notable female Palestinian suicide bombers include:

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Davis, Jessica. "Evolution of The Global Jihad: Female Suicide Bombers in Iraq." Studies in Conflict & Terrorism 36.4 (2013): 279-291. Academic Search Complete. Web November 16, 2015.
  2. News: R.S.. Why Boko Haram uses female suicide-bombers. The Economist. 23 October 2017.
  3. Web site: Female Suicide Bombers . 2018-05-14.
  4. News: 'I Had to Be the Voice of Women': The First Female Hijacker Shares Her Story Broadly. Broadly. 2017-05-08. en-US.
  5. Weinberg. Leonard. Eubank. William Lee. Italian women terrorists. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism. 9. 3. 241–262. 10.1080/10576108708435630. 1987.
  6. Book: Ortiz, Roxanne Dunbar. Outlaw woman: a memoir of the war years, 1960-1975. registration. City Lights. 2001. San Francisco, CA. 154. 9780872863903 .
  7. Book: Hahn Rafter, Nicole. Encyclopedia of Women and Crime. registration. Onyx Press. 2000. Phoenix, AZ. 9781573562140 .
  8. Erin. Alexander. 2014. Women of War: The Female Fighters of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Cornell International Affairs Review. en. 7. 2.
  9. Web site: Zedalis. Debra. June 2004. Female suicide bombers.
  10. Mullins. Christopher W.. Wright. Richard. Jacobs. Bruce A.. 2004-11-01. Gender, Streetlife and Criminal Retaliation*. Criminology. en. 42. 4. 911–940. 10.1111/j.1745-9125.2004.tb00540.x. 1745-9125.
  11. Web site: A Fact Sheet form the Worldwide Incidents Team. Retrieved 2017-14-04.
  12. Web site: Lebanon's women warriors. Khrais. Bilal. Al Jazeera. 2017-05-17.
  13. News: Revealed: world's deadliest female terrorists. 2016-09-06. 2015-02-17. Blair. David.
  14. Book: Pape, Robert A.. Dying to Win. registration. Random House Trade Paperback. 2005. 978-0812973389. New York. 226.
  15. Ransirini. Shamara. 2015. Becoming Militant: Narrative of (Dis?) embodiment in Visakesa Chandrasekaram's Tigers Don't Confess. Outskirts. 33. September 6, 2016.
  16. News: 2006-04-25 . Suicide attack on Sri Lanka's top military commander leaves 8 dead . en-US . The New York Times . 2022-02-28 . 0362-4331.
  17. Web site: Sri Lanka: At least 17 dead, over 43 injured in two blasts in Colombo - Sri Lanka . 2022-02-28 . ReliefWeb . 28 November 2007 . en.
  18. Inigo Gilmore: Woman suicide bomber shakes Israelis, Daily Telegraph, 28 January 2002
  19. Web site: Female bomber's mother speaks out. 2002-01-30. BBC. 15 March 2011.
  20. James Bennet: Israelis Declare Arab Woman Was in Fact a Suicide Bomber, The New York Times, 9 February 2002 (req. subscr.)
  21. Book: From freedom fighters to terrorists : women and political violence. Eager, Paige Whaley. 2016. Routledge. 9780754672258. 950471809.
  22. News: Smith. Craig S.. 2005-12-06. Raised as Catholic in Belgium, She Died as a Muslim Bomber. en-US. The New York Times. 2021-12-24. 0362-4331.
  23. News: 1996-07-01 . SUICIDE BOMBER KILLS 9 SOLDIERS IN TURKEY .
  24. News: Twelve die in Dagestan bombings. 2010-03-31. BBC News. 2016-09-06.
  25. News: Nigeria violence: Bomb at fish market kills at least 20 . en-GB. 2016-09-06. BBC News. 2015-06-22.
  26. https://thediplomat.com/2018/01/bangladeshs-new-generation-of-militants/ Bangladesh's new generation of militants
  27. News: Dhaka sees first female suicide bomber . Dhaka Tribune . 2016-12-25 . 2024-01-04. Arifur Rahman Rabbi.
  28. https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/18/world/asia/indonesia-surabaya-terrorism-dita-oepriarto.html Indonesia: Surabaya terrorism
  29. https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2018/05/13/surabaya-church-bombings-what-we-know-so-far.html Surabaya church bombings: what we know so far
  30. https://www.cnn.com/2018/05/13/asia/indonesia-attacks-surabaya-intl/index.html Indonesia attacks: Surabaya
  31. News: Kate Lamb . Indonesia church bombings: police say one family and their children behind attacks . The Guardian . 2018-05-13. 2018-05-14.
  32. News: Indonesia's first female suicide bomber a mum of 4, SE Asia News & Top Stories . The Straits Times . 2018-05-13. 2018-05-14.
  33. Web site: Female graduate student behind Pakistan university attack: Report . 2022-04-27 . www.aljazeera.com . en.
  34. News: 2022-04-26 . Pakistan attack: Chinese killed in blast in Karachi . en-GB . BBC News . 2022-04-26.
  35. Nolen. Elizabeth. Spring 2016. Female Suicide Bombers: Coerced or Committed?. Global Security Studies. 7.
  36. Wood. Reed M. Thomas. Jakana L. 2017-01-24. Women on the frontline. Journal of Peace Research. en. 54. 1. 31–46. 10.1177/0022343316675025. 152263427.
  37. Bloom. Mia. 2011-06-01. Bombshells: Women and Terror. Gender Issues. en. 28. 1–2. 1–21. 10.1007/s12147-011-9098-z. 143682884. 1098-092X.
  38. Ness. Cindy D.. 2005-09-01. In the Name of the Cause: Women's Work in Secular and Religious Terrorism. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism. 28. 5. 353–373. 10.1080/10576100500180337. 143769756. 1057-610X.
  39. News: Women and Jihad: The motivation of female suicide bombers. The Jerusalem Post . 2017-05-12.
  40. Salem. Edmar. 2015-09-02. Attitudes towards female suicide bombers in Palestine and Tamil Sri Lanka. Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression. 7. 3. 200–209. 10.1080/19434472.2015.1009482. 143979032. 1943-4472.
  41. CUNNINGHAM. KARLA J.. 2003-05-01. Cross-Regional Trends in Female Terrorism. Studies in Conflict & Terrorism. 26. 3. 171–195. 10.1080/10576100390211419. 110362253. 1057-610X.
  42. News: Deadly secret of the black widows. Vinogradova. Luba. 2017-05-08. en.
  43. Erakat, Noura. "Arabiya Made Invisible: Between Marginalization of Agency and Silencing of Dissent" in Arab & Arab American Feminisms: Gender, Violence, & Belonging. Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 2011. eBook Collection (EBSCOhost). Web. November 18, 2015
  44. Amireh, Amal. "Palestinian Women's Disappearing Act: The Suicide Bomber Through Western Feminist Eyes" in Arab & Arab American Feminisms: Gender, Violence, & Belonging. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 2011. eBook Collection (EBSCOhost). Web. November 18, 2015
  45. Web site: Messengers of Death - Female Suicide Bombers. www.ict.org.il. en. 2017-05-08. 2016-10-18. https://web.archive.org/web/20161018012422/https://www.ict.org.il/Article.aspx?ID=854. dead.
  46. Thomas. Jakana L.. 2021. Wolves in Sheep's Clothing: Assessing the Effect of Gender Norms on the Lethality of Female Suicide Terrorism. International Organization. 75. 3. 769–802. en. 10.1017/S0020818321000035. 233710309. 0020-8183.
  47. Web site: The Brides of Allah: The Terror Threat of Black-Widow Suicide Bombers to the Winter Olympics. Web Retrieved 2017-14-04. HuffPost. 2014-02-13.
  48. Web site: Women - 'human bombs': They make the death and girls aged 10 years. web Retrieved 2017-14-04. 24 November 2015 .
  49. Book: Rationality, Democracy, and Justice: The Legacy of Jon Elster. López-Guerra. Claudio. Maskivker. Julia. 2015-02-05. Cambridge University Press. 978-1-316-12373-7. en.
  50. https://www.haaretz.com/2003-05-21/ty-article/female-bombers-show-shift-in-thinking/0000017f-db47-db5a-a57f-db6f8a700000 Female bombers show shift in thinking
  51. News: Human-bomb mother kills four Israelis at Gaza checkpoint. McGreal. Chris. 2004-01-14. 2016-09-06. en-GB. 0261-3077. The Guardian.