Jonathan Owen
The killing was evidence that British jihadis are some of the most vicious and vociferous fighters in Syria and Iraq. They are very much at the forefront of this conflict, with roles ranging from suicide bombers to executioners.
THE brutal beheading of US journalist James Foley by a Briton fighting in the ranks of Isis, which calls itself Islamic State, is the latest — and most shocking — example of British jihadists committing atrocities in Syria and Iraq. Britain accounts for around one in four of all European fighters who have pledged their allegiance to Isis, with an estimated 500 Britons among 2,000 foreign fighters from across Europe. One reason is the sheer ease with which people can get to Istanbul in Turkey, and then catch a bus to get into neighbouring Syria, according to Charlie Cooper, a researcher at the Quilliam Foundation. Isis wants to “show off” its foreign fighters as part of its propaganda, he added. And the unnamed man who beheaded Mr Foley “will have committed himself entirely to furthering the aims of the Islamic state” and “completely rejected his British nationality”.
The killing of the American journalist was evidence that British jihadis were “some of the most vicious and vociferous fighters” in Syria and Iraq, said Shiraz Maher, a senior researcher at the International Center for the Study of Radicalisation at King's College London. They are “very much at the forefront of this conflict,” with roles ranging from suicide bombers to executioners, he added. Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond called the killing an “appalling example of the brutality of this organisation” and admitted that “significant numbers” of Britons are involved in “terrible crimes, probably in the commission of atrocities”. Professor Anthony Glees, of the Centre for Security and Intelligence Studies at the University of Buckingham, told The Independent: “Why are there Brits there? In my view, this is because Islamist extremist ideologies have been able to be spread with relative ease in our country under the cover of ‘religion’, ‘free speech’ and ‘multiculturalism’. He added: “A small number of British Muslims have been brainwashed by so-called preachers, from western values and convinced that they must kill to create a global caliphate.”
And they are willing to die for their beliefs. Abdul Waheed Majeed, a 41-year-old father of three from Crawley, Sussex, died in a suicide bomb attack on a jail in Aleppo in February. Many other Britons have been killed in the fighting. Earlier this month, 25-year-old Muhammad Hamidur Rahman, a former Primark supervisor from Portsmouth, became the latest to die, bringing the total number of Britons killed to 19. Meanwhile, British fighters continue to make their presence felt online. Last week, images emerged of 23-year-old Abdel-Majed Abdel Bary, from London, holding the severed head of a soldier with the caption: “Chilling' with my homie or what's left of him.”
Radicalised Britons, who call themselves the “Baadiya Boys,” after their original base in Syria, are among the fighters who have raped and killed thousands of Yazidi refugees in northern Iraq. Another British fighter, Reyaad Khan, 20, from Cardiff, has boasted of preparing for “martyrdom ops” and planning “fireworks” in a series of tweets over recent weeks in which he has also claimed to have “executed many prisoners”. And recently it emerged that Nasser Muthana, 20, from Cardiff, had posted images on Twitter of a destroyed military building in northern Syria, claiming: “I'm getting good with these bombs.”
Muthana, who is in Syria with his 17-year-old brother Aseel, describes himself on Twitter as a “soldier of the Islamic State”. — The Independent
Spreading the net far and wide
The Isis claimed responsibility for detaining a Japanese man in Syria in a post on the Internet. A video clip posted on YouTube showed a man wearing a T-shirt lying on the ground being questioned by unidentified people. His name, he said, was Haruna Yukawa and that he was both a journalist and a doctor. The name is the same as that of a chief executive of a self-described private mercenary and security firm.
Despite measures in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kosovo, and Serbia to curb traffic, the export of jihadists and mercenaries continues unabated.
In a report by International Center for the Study of Radicalism (ICSR), London, it was estimated about 6 per cent of foreign fighters in Iraq and Syria originated in the Balkans. About 200 of Kosovo citizens estimatedly went to the Middle East and 16 of them killed.
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