The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US air strike targets ‘Jihadi John’ in Syria

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WASHINGTON: The US military conducted an air strike in Syria targeting ‘Jihadi John,’ the masked Islamic State (IS) militant with a British accent seen in grisly videos executing Western hostages, the Pentagon said.

Spokesman Peter Cook did not specify whether Mohammed Emwazi had been killed, saying in a statement that “we are assessing the results of tonight’s operation and will provide additional informatio­n as and where appropriat­e.”

The Pentagon said the Thursday air strike took place in Raqa, the Islamic State group’s de facto Syrian capital.

“Emwazi, a British citizen, participat­ed in the videos showing the murders of US journalist­s Steven Sotloff and James Foley, US aid worker Abdul-Rahman Kassig, British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, Japanese journalist Kenji Goto, and a number of other hostages,” the Pentagon said.

CNN and the Washington Post, citing officials, reported that Emwazi was targeted by a drone.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said it was not yet clear

Emwazi, a British citizen, participat­ed in the videos showing the murders of US journalist­s Steven Sotloff and James Foley, US aid worker Abdul-Rahman Kassig, British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, Japanese journalist Kenji Goto, and a number of other hostages.

whether “Jihadi John” had been killed in a US air strike in Syria.

Cameron said the strike had targeted Emwazi but added: “We cannot yet be certain if the strike was successful” in a statement delivered outside his Downing Street office.

He added: “This was an act of self-defence, it was the right thing to do.”

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, said four people were killed in a strike in Raqa late on Thursday.

“The car was hit in the centre of town, near the municipali­ty building,” Observator­y chief Rami Abdel Rahman said.

He said sources described one of those killed as a ‘senior British member of the group’.

Emwazi, a London computer programmer, was born in Kuwait to a stateless family of Iraqi origin. His parents moved to Britain in 1993 after their hopes of obtaining Kuwaiti citizenshi­p were quashed.

Dubbed ‘Jihadi John’ by British and US media, he first appeared in a video in August of 2014 showing the beheading of Foley, a 40-yearold American freelance journalist who had been missing since he was seized in Syria in November 2012.

Video of the beheading, titled ‘A Message to America,’ sparked worldwide revulsion.

In it, IS declares that Foley was killed because President Barack Obama ordered air strikes against the group in northern Iraq.

Foley is seen kneeling on the ground, dressed in an orange outfit that resembles those worn by prisoners held at the US naval base at Guantanamo Bay.

Emwazi is dressed entirely in black and wears a mask.

Two weeks later, Foley’s fellow US hostage Steven Sotloff was killed in the same manner, again on camera and by the same executione­r with a British accent.

Sotloff’s mother, Shirley Sotloff, told NBC News following word of Thursday’s strike that she had not been informed about it and that, even if Emwazi had been killed, “it doesn’t bring my son back.”

“Who knows if he’s gone,” NBC News quoted her as saying. “I don’t think there will ever be closure.”

On Nov 16, IS said it had executed Peter Kassig, a 26-year-old US aid worker kidnapped in Syria in October 2013, again as a warning to Washington.

‘Jihadi John’ was six years old when his family moved to London. He grew up in North Kensington, a leafy middle-class area where a network of Islamist extremists was uncovered in recent years. — AFP

Peter Cook, Pentagon spokesman

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 ??  ?? A file picture taken on Feb 27, shows an arrangemen­t of British daily newspapers photograph­ed in London showing the front-page headlines and stories regarding the identifica­tion of the masked Islamic State group militant dubbed ‘Jihadi John’. — AFP photo
A file picture taken on Feb 27, shows an arrangemen­t of British daily newspapers photograph­ed in London showing the front-page headlines and stories regarding the identifica­tion of the masked Islamic State group militant dubbed ‘Jihadi John’. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? Yazidi human rights activist Dakhil Shammo speaks at a press conference on the release of a report on the plight of the Yazidi people of northern Iraq by the Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide onThursday at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC. — AFP photo
Yazidi human rights activist Dakhil Shammo speaks at a press conference on the release of a report on the plight of the Yazidi people of northern Iraq by the Holocaust Memorial Museum’s Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide onThursday at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, DC. — AFP photo

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