Middle East and Africa | European jihadists

It ain’t half hot here, mum

Why and how Westerners go to fight in Syria and Iraq

Kaliphate kool
|CAIRO

THE two young men in the bus from Antakya, in south-eastern Turkey, to Reyhanli, nearer the border with Syria, sported long beards, calf-length trousers and toted small drawstring bags with their minimal belongings. They spoke in broken Arabic to the bus driver (local Turks usually have a smattering of the language) but to each other in a regional British accent. They were just two out of hundreds of Muslims from Europe, setting off to Syria to join the battle. That was two years ago. Since then, several thousand may have signed up—and the rate may be increasing. What do they do when they get there? And what might they do when they go home?

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline "It ain’t half hot here, mum"

The criminalisation of American business

From the August 30th 2014 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Middle East and Africa

University protests about Gaza spread to the Middle East

But Arab students are looking to America for inspiration

Gulf governments are changing, but not how they talk to citizens

Rumours about downpours in Dubai and rosé in Riyadh stem from a lack of trust


How South Africa has changed 30 years after apartheid

Poverty is rife and inequality still starkly racial