The Free Press Journal

British ISIS militant wants to return home, says report

-

A British ISIS militant wants to return home to face justice after becoming disillusio­ned with the terrorist network, according to messages he has exchanged with a UK newspaper. Shabazz Suleman, a former schoolboy from Buckingham­shire in south-east England who vanished on a family holiday to Turkey three years ago, has told The Times that he is desperate to return as he escaped ISIS-controlled territory in northern Syria. "Everyone's leaving. I got out a week and a half ago. I spent a couple of months in Deir Ezzor. I was Awol (absent without leave; in hiding). I got into a car and I drove with one of the fighters because they were retreating. "It was everyone, not just ISIS, it was huge — a mass exodus. There was heavy bombing," he told the newspaper from the city of Jarabulus on the Syrian border with Turkey, where he was captured by Liwa al-Shimal, a Turkish-backed militia, reports PTI. "ISIS in Deir Ezzor has collapsed, everyone's just running away. The YPG [a western-backed Kurdish militia] didn’t stop us. They were going back to the front line," added Suleman, who turned 21 two weeks ago.

He now fears for his life because ISIS agents are hunting deserters. "They kill you if you try to escape. One of the smugglers told me he was not meant to be helping me because they would kill him," he said. The Times reports that Suleman has been in contact with the newspaper through online encrypted messaging services on the agreement that his story would not be published until he was beyond the borders of ISIS territory or dead.

He claims to have been radicalise­d online and became a vocal supporter of the terrorist network but soon found himself becoming a "disillusio­ned jihadi". In November 2014, the newspaper had revealed that he had joined ISIS as part of a mass prisoner swap between the group and Turkey, in order to secure the release of 46 diplomats being held in Mosul, northern Iraq.

Suleman made his first contact with the newspaper under the assumed name Abu Shamil al-Britani and began by justifying his decision to leave Britain to join the group, saying he had "disliked the government for its foreign policy long ago".

But in a string of messages in May this year, he claimed he was prepared to serve a prison sentence in order to return home to the UK and criticised the murder of 23 concert-goers in the Manchester Arena bombing claimed by ISIS. Now, his father has said that the family would assist the authoritie­s in any way they could to have his son back home.

"I would never have taken him to Turkey if I had known what he was thinking. I know for a fact that he has become a civilian and he hasn’t been in the battlefiel­d for at least two years and never killed anyone or anything," Afzal Suleman said.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India