Falling prey to Islamic terrorists

Moscow State University student Varvara Karaulova, suspected of the involvement in the IS terrorist group, appears at a hearing, at the Lefortovsky District Court.

Moscow State University student Varvara Karaulova, suspected of the involvement in the IS terrorist group, appears at a hearing, at the Lefortovsky District Court.

Press office of the Lefortovsky District Court/TASS
Varvara Karaulova, a Moscow State University topper caught at the border between Turkey and Syria earlier this year, has been arrested and charged with terrorism for attempting to join the Islamic State terror organisation. There are suspicions that she may have been acting as a recruiter. RIR spoke with her father and classmates to try and understand what happened to her.

The story of Varvara Karaulova, the bright Moscow State University student who suddenly dropped out to join the Islamic State (ISIS) terror group before being caught at the Turkish border, has returned to the Russian headlines after her arrest and charges of terrorism against her.

A criminal case for taking part in a terrorist organization (punishable by up to 15 years in prison) was opened against the 19-year-old woman after her arrest in late October. She was charged for attempting to join ISIS. The reason she was charged on counts of terrorism on November 10 was the discovery of Karaulova's correspondence with an ISIS militant, with whom she had allegedly fallen in love, and the suspicion that she might be a recruiter.

After Karaulova returned to Russia, investigators in July 2015 said they had no case against her and questioned her as a witness, but did not detain her. Instead, they arrested two other Russians who accompanied her during her abortive attempt to join ISIS.

Following the furore over being caught at the Turkish-Syrian border, the student took a sabbatical and was placed in a rehabilitation programme. There was widespread disbelief among the Russian public at the time over how a ‘straight-As’ student from a well-to-do family and an intellectual fluent in five languages could become the victim of Islamist recruiters. The story appeared to have died down, however, until Karaulova’s arrest on October 28.

Straight-A student

Karaulova is among those commonly referred to as a "gifted child." She has won national competitions, graduated from high school with honours and entered the Faculty of Philosophy's Department of Cultural Studies with ease. Boys, fashionable clothing, cosmetics, none of these attracted her.

"She always went around like this; a free skirt, a T-shirt, modest clothes. When someone courted her, she would say, 'He likes me, but I don't like him. So what's next?’" a classmate and close friend of Karaulova told RIR, on condition of anonymity.

At school, Karaulova was comfortable with her peers, but this did not work with classmates at university; in her first year of studies, she described them as "idiots" and was something of a loner. According to her classmates, hardly anyone knew what was going on in her life.

"She was always closed and detached," said one of her peers (who also requested that her name not be disclosed).

While students at Moscow State University are very reluctant to speak about Karaulova, the incident has also shocked the lecturers, who are now concerned about the reputation of the department and advise students to minimize contact with journalists.

The lecturers knew no more about Karaulova than those who studied with her. According to the Faculty of Philosophy's deputy dean for research, Alexei Kozyrev, who gave lectures to her group in the first year, she did not stand out compared to other students.

"A quiet, neat girl, and, in general, she studied well. I did not notice any signs of her fascination with Islam, I think they did not exist at all," he told RIR.

These signs appeared in September 2015, when Karaulova began to attend a special course in Arabic and came to classes in a headscarf, in which some discerned the hijab.

But an interest in Arabic or a scarf or even hijab is no surprise for anybody at the faculty, where there are many people of different faiths. Shortly before fleeing to Syria, Karaulova changed her online messenger user name to Amina (this was the name of the Prophet Muhammad's mother).

The only signal that something was amiss, this minor event unsurprisingly failed to attract attention. On May 27, Karaulova vanished, leaving behind a ring engraved with the words "Save and protect" (they say she did not take it off before) and an Orthodox cross.

‘Please, take everything away from me’

Karaulova was returned to Russia almost immediately: Her father Pavel Karaulov had good connections in the FSB and the Russian Foreign Ministry.

"She has a very broad vision, and the ability to learn languages has enabled her to explore primary sources, including in Arabic," said Karaulov in an interview with RIR.

That is why the appearance of the Koran in the house and her interest in Islam was not immediately noticed. In addition, alongside Islam she studied other religions.

When Karaulova disappeared, "connections" helped – the trace led to Turkey. "When I was traveling there, one of the versions I had was that she was going on holiday to Turkey, in order to plunge into the range of interests of the Islamic world," said her father.

After Karaulova was detained by the Migration Service alongside other Russians, it became clear that the trip had nothing to do with a holiday, though her father insists that her sole motive was "strong affection.”

"This was the only boy, she has never had any other. And only virtual communication. It is almost obvious for us now that this person is a synthetic image, and its creation involved several people."

However, RIR managed to learn from her classmates that, in reality, Karaulova did have a boyfriend; they attended a special course in Arabic together "until she dumped him."

After her failed escape, according to her father, Karaulova said, "Please, just take away everything from me. If necessary, I will ask."

Success plus solitude

No one in the family knew that Karaulova was continuing to correspond with her ISIS lover, her parents say. Her father sees the arrest as a "tragic mistake."

Based on his experience, the student's former lawyer, Alexander Karabanov (Karaulova refused his services on Nov. 10, the day that the charges were pressed – RIR), admits that the young woman was probably the best candidate for the dissemination of ISIS ideas among similarly well-educated young people.

Throughout this time, Karaulova was in the sights of the security services, he said.

"Such important witnesses as she was are always being monitored. <...> Unfortunately, she was returned as a physical body, but psychologists failed to knock the nonsense out of her head. It would be good to answer the question to what extent she realized what she was doing.”

Why did all this happen to Karaulova? Her classmate believes that it was a revolt, a late adolescent crisis. When she was 15, Karaulova had neither parties with alcohol or clubs or overnight stays with friends. Studies, sports, constant preparation (always followed by success) plus loneliness – that is all that she had.

According to her father, Karaulova fell victim to the recruiters because of her "crazy kindness" and softness. After getting into university, she asked for a gift, but it was not jewelry, electronic gadgets or a car that she had her heart set upon.

"You know what she asked for? To take a puppy from a shelter," said her father.

"<...> Such a person as she cannot help but respond to the pain of others, children, the elderly and animals. This is what they play on, very skilfully," he said.

But for Deputy Dean Kozyrev, the most difficult thing to understand is how Karaulova could have failed to see the terrifying footage of Islamic executions on the internet, in which ISIS militants are seen decapitating captured hostages.

"I think she must have seen this,” he said. “But then to cooperate with such people?"

All rights reserved by Rossiyskaya Gazeta.

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