With Bloody Clan fighting, jihadism and moral guards, living in Austria always come to live in the headlines. In a recent study, women and men provide insight into the strictly patriarchal social life and why Western ways of life are rejected.
With more than 40,000 Checkens, Austria is the home of one of the largest communities in Europe, half of which lives in Vienna, is not always free of conflicts. Sittens Guards in Vienna, including in the Handelskai, already made outrage. Boys had tried to implement the Sharia (Islamic law) according to their own interpretation.
Moreover, the share of those who join Syria in Syria is particularly great for Austrian sketches. How this happens was created in a study of the Documentation Center of Political Islam in collaboration with German society for foreign policy. The arm of the president of Chechen Ramsan Kadyrov extends well into the Diaspora.
Escape in the family network
The majority of the Chechen came from the Russian army and its allies from North Caucasus to Europe, especially during the two Chechen wars, a conflict that still influences people to this day. In the conversations, both male and female respondents reported that they had the first contact on the internet or social media.
It is difficult for parents to control the internet activities of their children. Since closing liability in Chetsjenia is used because of the Kadyrow clan, the Family Association has fled.
Preserved chips bloodline
Women in the Chechen community cannot choose their partner themselves, the pressure of the community forces them to cover their bodies. The young men rely on Chechen ordinary law according to the pre -Islamic traditions of Adat, which is strongly oriented. The moral guards are mainly focused on the behavior of girls and women of their own community (in their eyes illegally or rejected), those attempts are made to undermine their right to self -determination.
They are mainly focused on “Western” forms of behavior and want to retain the “Chechen’s Bloodline” at all costs. According to the research results, an important motive is to prevent the relationships and marriages of Chechen from men outside the community. Social media channels are also searched for this purpose.
Moral guards are instructions in online groups
Women are threatened and even injured. Reporting sacrifices that photos in swimwear or a relationship with a non-slip case were sufficient for the moral guards. The photos were then hung in mosques to point to the alleged misconduct of the woman. The moral guards organize their activities through online chat groups. The causes of this development are, as the study demonstrates, especially in the lack of perspective, in combination with the instrumentalization of religion as a “ideology resistance”.
Source: Krone

I am Wallace Jones, an experienced journalist. I specialize in writing for the world section of Today Times Live. With over a decade of experience, I have developed an eye for detail when it comes to reporting on local and global stories. My passion lies in uncovering the truth through my investigative skills and creating thought-provoking content that resonates with readers worldwide.