时间:2019-01-12 作者:英语课 分类:2016年VOA慢速英语(九)月


英语课

AS IT IS 2016-09-05 Most Victims of Terrorist Attacks Are Muslim 恐怖袭击的大多数受害者是穆斯林


Muslim militants 1 tried to create areas governed by Islamic law long before the Islamic State group began its campaign in the Middle East.


Some groups supported attacks on governments that they did not believe were enforcing Islamic law. Others believed they should work to weaken Western countries -- especially the United States.


In the 1990s the terrorist group al-Qaida won the debate. It supported attacks on the United States, including those that took place on September 11, 2001.


But al-Qaida’s power has lessened 2 in recent years. Terror groups have formed that are working to weaken government in the Middle East, South Asia and North Africa. These groups include the Islamic State, which has supported attacks on neighboring countries -- including those led by Muslims.


The result is that most of the victims of terrorist attacks by Muslims over the past 15 years have been other Muslims. Recently, a 14-year-old Islamic State suicide bomber 3 attacked a Kurdish wedding in southeastern Turkey. More than 50 people were killed.


Richard Bulliet is a retired 4 professor of history at Columbia University. He says most non-Muslims should not be worried about terrorism.


“I understand why the media cover terrorism in the West so closely, and I understand why people who follow these events become so frightened, but, objectively speaking, the threat of terrorism is not very great.”


Between 2001 and 2015, there were 167,221 victims of terrorism. About 98 percent of them took place outside the United States and Western Europe, according to the University of Maryland Global Terrorism Database.


The database is supported by the United States government. It is the largest public collection of information about terrorist attacks in the world.


The database does not record the religious belief of victims. However, it has gathered information about attacks in 25 Muslim-majority countries from Iraq to Malaysia. The information shows that 75 percent of all deaths from terrorist attacks from 2001 to 2015 took place in those countries.


During that time, there were 3,689 deaths in the United States and Western Europe from terrorist attacks. This includes 2,977 from the September 11, 2001 attacks. That is 2.2 percent of all terrorism-related deaths during that time.


Not all victims of terrorism in Muslim-majority countries are Muslims. Victims have included Christians 5, Yazidis and other minorities. There also have been many non-Christians among the victims of terrorist attacks in the United States and Western Europe.


Michael Jensen is the data collection manager for the Global Terrorism Database. He says it is safe to assume that the majority of victims of terrorist attacks in Muslim countries are Muslims.


Driven by more than religion


Information in the database shows some countries have many victims while others have very few. More than 50,000 have been killed in Iraq. But only six people have been killed in Malaysia in terrorist attacks in the past 15 years.


The reason for many of the attacks is not clear. Jensen says the large number of victims in Muslim countries compared to those in non-Muslim countries suggests that the reason is not limited to religion.


“It has to be something else,” he says.


Researchers at the Institute for Economics and Peace have looked for patterns in the Global Terrorism Database.


They have found two things common to countries where there is terrorism. Their research shows that 92 percent of all terrorist attacks in the past 25 years have taken place in countries with state-sponsored political violence. And 88 percent of attacks have taken place in places where violent conflicts are happening.


In most Muslim-majority countries with a high level of terrorist activity, one or both of these problems are present.


Iraq may be the strongest example of a country with a long history of state-sponsored violence and political conflict.


Since the 1990s terrorists have sought to oust 6 governments in the Middle East, South Asia and North Africa.


Jensen said that in Muslim-majority countries, militants often attack citizens and property, security forces and government and diplomatic officials and institutions.


“I think in a majority of cases where Muslims are victims of terrorism, they’re largely targeted not because they’re Muslim but because they’re police officers or soldiers or happen to be in a public place,” Jensen said.


He said disputes between Sunni and Shi’ite Muslims is a major source of conflict. About 10 percent of the 1.7 billion Muslims in the world are Shia.


Professor Bulliet says Shia are being attacked by Sunni extremists from Iraq to Pakistan because they are considered a heretical minority.


Bulliet says the conflict is part of a struggle for power in majority-Sunni societies. He says those societies have still not decided 7 what power will be held by political and religious officials.


He adds that it is still not clear in those societies what the relationship is between religion and the modern world. He says these questions have been unanswered for many years.


Words in This Story


assume - v. to think that something is true or probably true without knowing that it is true


pattern - n. a repeated form or design especially that is used to decorate something


state-sponsored - adj. paid for by the government


institution - n. an established organization


heretical - adj. someone who believes or teaches something that goes against accepted or official beliefs



激进分子,好斗分子( militant的名词复数 )
  • The militants have been sporadically fighting the government for years. 几年来,反叛分子一直对政府实施零星的战斗。
  • Despite the onslaught, Palestinian militants managed to fire off rockets. 尽管如此,巴勒斯坦的激进分子仍然发射导弹。
减少的,减弱的
  • Listening to the speech through an interpreter lessened its impact somewhat. 演讲辞通过翻译的嘴说出来,多少削弱了演讲的力量。
  • The flight to suburbia lessened the number of middle-class families living within the city. 随着迁往郊外的风行,住在城内的中产家庭减少了。
n.轰炸机,投弹手,投掷炸弹者
  • He flew a bomber during the war.他在战时驾驶轰炸机。
  • Detectives hunting the London bombers will be keen to interview him.追查伦敦爆炸案凶犯的侦探们急于对他进行讯问。
adj.隐退的,退休的,退役的
  • The old man retired to the country for rest.这位老人下乡休息去了。
  • Many retired people take up gardening as a hobby.许多退休的人都以从事园艺为嗜好。
n.基督教徒( Christian的名词复数 )
  • Christians of all denominations attended the conference. 基督教所有教派的人都出席了这次会议。
  • His novel about Jesus caused a furore among Christians. 他关于耶稣的小说激起了基督教徒的公愤。
vt.剥夺,取代,驱逐
  • The committee wanted to oust him from the union.委员会想把他从工会中驱逐出去。
  • The leaders have been ousted from power by nationalists.这些领导人被民族主义者赶下了台。
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
  • This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
  • There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
标签:
学英语单词
a tightsqueeze
abandoned path
accumulator transfer instruction
actuation in wet oiling condition
Alectroria
alkaline-earth metal compound
andirobas
aquino (aquinum)
Boerhaave Museum
car lots
carried set
catching them
central waste water treatment
conversion magnetohydrodynamic
cope closing machine
corollitic
coroutine
corvette
dashing leather
deliver up
distal margin
dwarf chestnuts
dwarf-throwing
effective acoustic center
elliptic double refraction
examplary
ferthe
fiscal quarter
fitness cost
flawlessnesses
flight of idea
fole
galeus eastmani
Hadj Moussa, Hassi
Harperite
have ... faith in
high-volumes
horizontal shaft mixer
hotstrip
hydromechanical drive with outer ramification
importance indication
inelastic deformation
inverted structure
isthmus of cartilage of auricle
Iňapari
Kareius
Kiabukwa
Latinos
leitneria floridanas
lung grasping forceps
markas
Masorah
memory interconnect
meteorium horikawae
metropolitan mass transit railway terminal
microbiochemical
microchemical test
mint par
monadelphian
multipoint line
national co-ordinator
noise distribution
noise reduction
non-nuclear component
novargan
oikocryst
oligopsonies
open your heart
painted turtle
Peraleda de la Mata
phthalic alkyd
prophesier
Pseudococcus coffeae Newst.
radioisotope indicator
refutal
Reil's insula
Rhinogutt
seeing image
shelf filler
sinker pile knitting machine
slop bowl
specific capacity of well
speiring
stepped plug
sun-tannings
sunbaths
thermal motion
thyroixin
time-space diagram
trabeculae corporis spongiosi penis
Trappist
travel(l)ing cut-off saw
turns over to
ulemorrhsagia
usten
Villars-les-Dombes
wall sth in
watersoaked
withal
withcalls
yesayans
Yo-yo phenomenon