The Borneo Post

IS chief Baghdadi urges ‘jihad’ in purported new recording

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BEIRUT: The leader of the Islamic State jihadist group Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi called on Muslims to wage ‘ jihad’ in a purported new audio recording released on Wednesday.

He also called for attacks in the West in the Telegram message on Aid al-Adha, which comes as IS has lost most of its territory in Iraq and Syria.

It is the first purported recording of the IS leader to be released since September last year.

“Those who forget their religion, patience, jihad against their enemies, and their certainty in the creator’s promise lose and are disgraced,” the leader said.

“But when they hold on to it, they are mighty and victorious, even if after a certain time.”

IS overran large swathes of Syria and neighbouri­ng Iraq in 2014, proclaimin­g a ‘caliphate’ in areas they controlled.

But they have since lost most of that to various offensive in both countries.

The “caliphate will remain, God willing”, Baghdadi however said in Wednesday’s recording, addressing followers in the Middle East, Asia and Africa.

It was not clear when the message was recorded, but Baghdadi appeared to criticise a US$ 100million pledge by Saudi Arabia last week to help rebuild Syria’s northeast.

He threatened the United States and Russia, who have both backed offensive against IS, saying that the jihadists had prepared ‘horrors’ for them.

Speaking of war-torn Syria, he criticised rebel fighters for agreeing to surrender deals with the Damascus regime, and called on opposition fighters to join his jihadist group.

The IS chief made his only known public appearance in Iraq’s second city of Mosul in July 2014.

Baghdadi has been pronounced dead on several occasions, but an Iraqi intelligen­ce official said in May that he remains alive in Syrian territory by the Iraqi border.

Baghdadi was said to move around with only a small group of followers.

Originally from Iraq, Baghdadi has been dubbed the “most wanted man on the planet” and the United States is offering a US$ 25 million reward for his capture.

The Iraqi official said the noose was closing around the jihadist leader after Iraqi forces captured five top IS commanders in an unpreceden­ted raid in Syria on March 24.

In July, Iraqi intelligen­ce services said Baghdad’s son Hudhayfah al-Badri had been killed in Syria by three Russian missile targeting a cave where he was hiding.

In September 2017, in a voice message attributed to Baghdadi, the IS leader called on his fighters in Syria and Iraq to ‘resist’ their enemies. Today, after a vast military campaign by Iraqi forces backed by a US-led coalition, the jihadist group only has sleeping cells in Iraq.

In Syria, IS has faced two separate offensive by Russia-backed regime forces and another by a KurdishAra­b alliance supported by the US-led coalition.

They hold a few pockets in the far east of the country near the Iraqi border, and retain a presence in the vast desert stretching from the capital to the frontier. — AFP

 ??  ?? Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi

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