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After the attacks on mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand, the Australian senator Fraser Anning has claimed that Muslims are often executors of terrorist attacks. This claim has received worldwide attention. What do the statistics say about the religious background of terrorism? The statement was published by the Australian senator Fraser Anning on the 15th of march in 2019. The trigger behind his tweet was the terrorist attack in Christchurch, New Zealand, which happened on the same day. In the attack, a right-wing offender killed 50 people and injured 50 more. Multiple European politicians reacted sympathetically towards New Zealand and its people and enforced a multitude of extra safety measures on their places of worship, said France’s Interior Minister Christophe Castaner. According to the National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), a research and education center at the University of Maryland in the USA, there were 10,900 terrorist attacks in 2017. 26,400 people lost their lives in these attacks. The annual report stated that the countries who reported the most deaths due to terror attacks were the Iraq (24%), Afghanistan (23%) and Syria (8%). Since there are no recent or specific studies on the religious association of the victims of terror attacks it’s not possible to state exact numbers of who is the primary victim group when it comes to religion. However, 90% of Syria’s, 97% of Iraq’s and 99% of Afghanistan’s population identify as Muslims. Due to that factor it’s probable that the majority of the victims in these countries are Muslims. The Global Terrorism Index (GTI) uses data from the Global Terrorism Database (GTD) and is published annually by the Institute of Economics and Peace. The Index ranks 163 countries on how heavily they are affected by terrorism and reports a decline in Europe’s fatalities due to terrorism. The amount of fatalities due to terror attacks in Western-Europe were less than 1% in the international overview. In general, Western-Europe recorded a decline of terrorism. According to the latest Global Terrorism Index (GTI), the number of fatalities of terror attacks went down by 52%, from 168 to 81, compared to the previous year of 2016. The GTI also states that the total percentage of terror attacks in all of Europe went down by 75%. These numbers can be explained because there were multiple terrorist attacks in Europe in 2015 and 2016 (Paris, Berlin, Brussels) which resulted in exceptionally high numbers. According to these statistics it can be assumed that, in contrast to Anning’s statement Muslims may have been the victims today
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