Terror attacks in developed world surge 650% in one year
Story highlights
- Globally, deaths from terror attacks reduced by 10%
- Five countries account for 72% of all terrorism deaths
London (CNN)The
developed world became more dangerous in 2015 with a massive increase
in deaths from terrorism, although globally there was a slight fall,
according to new figures released Wednesday.
There
was a 650% increase in fatal terror attacks on people living in the
world's biggest economies in 2015, the Global Terrorism Index (GTI) 2016
reveals.
The annual report carried out for think tank the Institute for Economics and Peace (IEP) shows a complex picture with terrorism intensifying in some countries and spreading to new ones.
Small reduction in global deaths
However,
the study also shows that across the world as a whole, the number of
deaths from terrorism fell 10% to 29,376, compared to the previous year.
In
2015, there were 731 deaths related to terrorism in the 34 countries
that make up the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD), which includes the US, UK, Germany, France, and Turkey.
The
number represents the 650% increase on the previous year, with 21 of
the 34 countries suffering at least one attack, the report says. Most of
the victims were killed in Turkey and France.
The Bataclan music venue in Paris where 90 concert-goers were killed in a terror attack reopened Saturday, a year on from a string of ISIS shootings in the city which left 130 dead.
Five
countries -- Iraq, Nigeria, Afghanistan, Syria and Pakistan --
experienced the worst attacks, accounting for 72% of all deaths from
terrorism in 2015.
Syria saw a 50% rise in terrorism from 2014 to 2015.
Military
success against ISIS and Boko Haram resulted in fewer deaths in Iraq
and Nigeria but the two groups spread to neighboring states and regions,
according to the GTI report.
It also says the global economic impact of terrorism amounted to $89.6 billion in 2015.
Terror spread 'cause for serious concern'
"While
the reduction in deaths is positive, the continued intensification of
terrorism in some countries and its spread to new ones is a cause for
serious concern and underscores the fluid nature of modern terrorist
activity," IEF chief Steve Killelea said in a statement.
"The
attacks in the heartland of Western democracies underscore the need for
fast paced and tailored responses to the evolution of these
organizations," he said.
The report
claims that within OECD countries, youth unemployment, levels of
criminality, access to weapons and distrust in the electoral process are
the most significant factors correlating with terrorism.
ISIS activity spreads
It also says ISIS became active in more countries -- jumping from 13 in 2014 to 28 countries in 2015.
"Understanding
the drivers of terrorism is crucial if we are to develop
counter-terrorism strategies that help combat radicalization," Killelea
said.
"Military operations are
clearly contributing towards restraining ISIL [ISIS] in Iraq, but the
continued appeal of the organization, evident in the ISIL-inspired
attacks in Europe, demonstrates the limitations of a purely military
approach."
Last year's report
detailed the toll inflicted by the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram,
which in 2014 was responsible for 6,644 deaths. ISIS killed 6,073 people
in 2014. The two groups were responsible for more than half (51%) of deaths attributed to terrorism that year.

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