(New York, N.Y.) — The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the methods used by extremists and terrorist groups on the Internet to spread propaganda and incite violence. Last week CEP researchers located nearly a half-dozen accounts glorifying the accused assailant, who pledged his allegiance to ISIS, in the stabbing attack of an Orthodox Jew in Zurich. The accounts also posted a variety of pro-ISIS content. CEP also located an account on Meta-owned Instagram supporting the attacker.
Also, on Instagram, CEP identified 15 accounts posting ISIS and pro-ISIS propaganda, including Amaq posts, al-Naba newsletter pages, and content from the pro-ISIS-K al-Azaim group. On Twitter/X, an account belonging to neo-Nazi leader Christopher Polhaus was found, featuring a pinned tweet praising Adolf Hitler. Additionally, Australian neo-Nazi leader Thomas Sewell encouraged his followers on Telegram to return to mainstream social media platforms like Twitter/X, TikTok, and YouTube.
On Telegram last week, a channel for an extreme right jiu-jitsu team posted photos showing the team participating in a recent competition in Allentown, Pennsylvania, during which members displayed apparel supporting the white supremacist Patriot Front group. Finally on Telegram, the Latvian Active Club chapter announced its renaming to “Action Crew Latvia” due to heightened attention from their government’s security service.
Pro-ISIS TikTok Users Celebrate Zurich Stabbing Suspect
On March 6, CEP researchers found five accounts on TikTok that celebrated the teenager accused of stabbing an Orthodox Jewish man in Zurich on March 2. In a video, the 15-year-old pledged his allegiance to ISIS and called for acts of violence against Jews. The suspect was arrested at the scene after critically injuring the victim.
The five TikTok accounts, which also posted additional pro-ISIS content, posted the allegiance video of the attacker or photos with accompanying text praising the act of violence. When they were found on March 6, the videos had an average of 442 views, ranging between 144 and 1,186.
“ByteDance-owned TikTok has repeatedly failed to act against accounts glorifying attacks such as this, encouraging additional acts of violence, and uploading terrorist propaganda and clips of attack videos from white supremacist mass shootings. The company should be able to identify and remove this content, especially when it is reported by users,” said CEP researcher Joshua Fisher-Birch. “TikTok cannot continue to permit content on its platform that clearly violates its terms and conditions and encourages others to carry out acts of violence.”
CEP reported the five posts and associated accounts to TikTok on March 6. By March 11, one account had been removed, two additional accounts had the specific post removed, but the accounts remained online.
Pro-ISIS Instagram Accounts Located
In a sample of content located on Meta-owned Instagram on March 6, CEP researchers found 15 accounts that posted ISIS and pro-ISIS propaganda. Accounts posted clips from official ISIS videos and pro-ISIS propaganda videos, Amaq posts, pages from the group’s al-Naba weekly newsletter, and an infographic from the pro-ISIS-K al-Azaim propaganda group. One account with over 500 followers posted a video on March 2 supporting the suspected teenage Zurich attacker, which had 131 likes four days later. Another account posted a compilation of executions from ISIS propaganda videos on February 18, which had 22 likes by March 7.
The 15 accounts averaged 700 followers, ranging between 53 and 4,254. CEP reported the 15 accounts to Instagram on March 6, but all the accounts were still online on March 11.