The number of people killed globally in terrorist attacks jumped 80
percent last year to the highest level ever recorded, the Institute for
Economics and Peace said Tuesday.
The Global Terrorism Index found that 32,658 people were killed by
terrorists in 2014, up from the 18,111 fatalities of the previous year,
the largest increase on record.
The study defines terrorism as “the threatened or actual use of
illegal force and violence by a non-state actor to attain a political,
economic, religious, or social goal through fear, coercion, or
intimidation”.
Nigeria-based Boko Haram and the Islamic State group
were responsible for more than half of the deaths, according to the
study, which measures attacks, deaths and damage from terror attacks in
162 countries.
“Terrorism is gaining momentum at an unprecedented pace,” said Steve
Killelea, the executive chairman of the Institute of Economics and
Peace, which produces the study.
The increase followed a 61 percent rise in 2013.
The study found that terrorism was highly concentrated, with the five countries ofAfghanistan, Iraq, Nigeria, Pakistan and Syria accounting for 78 percent of deaths last year.
Iraq was the worst affected with 9,929
deaths from terrorism — suffering both the highest number of attacks and
the most fatalities from terrorism ever recorded by a country.
The biggest rise in fatalities from terrorism however was in Nigeria, which saw an increase of over 300 percent in deaths to 7,512.
Western states were much less at risk from attacks, which were most
likely to be perpetrated by lone wolves driven by political extremism,
nationalism or racial and religious supremacy rather than Islamic
fundamentalism, according to the study.
Britain suffered greatest number of terrorist incidents in the West, mostly relating to Irish republican paramilitaries in Northern Ireland, it found.
Nevertheless, attacks claimed by Islamic State in Paris that killed at least 129 last week could prove to be a milestone, according to Killelea.
“The Paris incident in many ways is a watershed within Europe. It shows that Isil (IS) has the capabilities to be able to launch sophisticated and deadly attacks in Europe,” Killelea said.
He warned that foreign fighters who had travelled to Iraq and Syria, estimated to number between 25,000 and 30,000 since 2011, could prove a risk.
“The returning fighters from Syria will have the military training,” Killelea said.
“The tactics of Isis are changing. They are targeting more private
citizens. It’s difficult – taking the time frame forward two years – to
see the Isis threat disappearing.”
The study estimated that the economic cost of terrorism amounted to
$52.9 billion, the highest ever level and a tenfold increase since 2000.
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