quinta-feira, 9 de abril de 2026

No-Go Zones Increase Prospect of Civil War, Experts Warn

 

An investigation has uncovered no fewer than 1,000 no-go zones spanning seven European countries. The research establishes a direct correlation between mass immigration, Islamization, and the creation of no-go zones governed by hardline Islamist doctrines.

“No-go zones are highly correlated to Islam,” the study titled No-Go Zones: Immigration, Islamisation, and the Rise of Parallel Societies finds. It warns that such zones are the result of Muslim demographic concentration, “rigid” Islamist ideologies, and an insular retreat from civic norms.

“These zones are not merely spatial anomalies but spatial-material manifestations of socio-religious disintegration in contexts of high migration from Muslim-majority regions,” the study published by New Direction—Foundation for European Conservatism in March concludes.

It finds that 63 percent of jihadi terrorists who attacked Europe between 2010 and 2025 had a “verified link” to a no-go zone and notes that these areas, with high rates of youth unemployment, “offer fertile ground for Salafist propaganda, which presents an alternative and valorizing identity.”

Civil War On the Horizon

If the trend is not reversed, the “risk of violent confrontations is real,” the research predicts. It cites Prof David Betz, from the Department of War Studies, King’s College London, warning: “Civil war thus emerges as a dual threat: military and security-related on the one hand, civilizational and cultural on the other.”

The research credits Daniel Pipes, founder of the Middle East Forum, with first popularizing the nomenclature of “no-go zones” in academic and public discourse.

In a blog compilation titled “The 751 No-Go Zones of France,” Pipes wrote that the French government alone counted 751 “partial no‑go zones,” since state representatives, especially the police, “can only enter with massive power for temporary periods of time.”

The New Direction study, however, laments scholarly reluctance to use the term. Instead, it notes, academics prefer substituting “no-go zones” with phrases like “parallel societies,” “ethnic enclaves,” or “zones of urban marginality.”

The research focuses on seven EU countries where no-go zones are most reported: France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Belgium, Sweden, and the Netherlands. It cites findings from the Migration Research Institute, Budapest, which estimates that there are now 900 to 1,000 areas across Europe exhibiting the key characteristics of no-go zones.

Eastern Europe Spared the Threat of No-Go Zones

Using 11 indicators like homicide, sexual violence, riots, antisemitism, attacks on police or firefighters, and state withdrawal, the New Directions study classifies the areas into low-risk zone, high-risk zone, confirmed no-go zone, severe no-go zone, and critical no-go zone.

The indicators classify localities such as Saint-Denis/Aubervilliers and La Castellane (Marseille) in France, Molenbeek in Belgium, and Malmö and Rosengård in Sweden as “critical” no-go zones. Neukölln in Berlin, Raval in Barcelona, Borgerhout in Antwerp, Aurora in Turin, and Angered in Gothenburg are classified as “severe” no-go zones. Rome’s Termini Station, within walking distance from the Vatican, is classified as a “high-risk” zone.

Muslims are “markedly overrepresented” in no-go zones with an average of 29%, the study finds. European countries “with the highest national concentrations of Muslim populations also appear to be those with the highest density of no-go zones.” But countries with lower Muslim populations, like Hungary or the Czech Republic, exhibit few to no comparable zones.

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Focus on Western Islam 

Report Credits Middle East Forum Founder Daniel Pipes For ‘No-Go Zones’ Label

 

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