The Daily Telegraph

‘British boy’ shown killing prisoners in new Isil video

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By Ben Farmer and Magdy Samaan A YOUNG British boy was last night allegedly pictured executing “spies” in a newly released Isil propaganda video.

The film released yesterday shows five boys apparently aged as young as six or seven shooting dead kneeling captives.

Captions on the online film identify one of the young pistol-wielding executione­rs, who are all wearing identical military-style uniform, as a Briton called Abu Abdullah al-Britani.

The other executione­rs, who are all of similar ages, are Egyptian, Kurdish, Tunisian and Uzbek according to captions of the video shot in Syria’s Raqqa province.

Last night the identity of the allegedly British child executione­r remained unclear. The same name was previously used by another British jihadist, Assad Uzzaman from Portsmouth, who was killed in Syria in July 2015.

Research earlier this year estimated that up to 50 British children are being brought up in the self-styled caliphate of Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil), after being taken to the region by their parents. Boys face indoctrina­tion with a rigid Isil curriculum and jihadist training that includes shooting practice and martial arts.

At least 12 child killers have appeared in Isil propaganda videos. One British boy, Isa Dare, the young son of jihadi bride Grace “Khadijah” Dare from south-east London, appeared in a video in January saying that jihadists will “kill the kuffar” (unbeliever­s).

The nine-minute video shows the shooting of prisoners identified as “atheist Kurds”.

One child, Abu al-Bara’a al-Tunisi, then says “To the atheist Kurds, what is between me and you are days during which the hair of young children turns grey. The war with you has yet to begin. Neither America, France, Britain, nor Germany will benefit you,” according to Site Intelligen­ce Group, which monitors jihadi propaganda.

Elsewhere, the video shows old men killing Syrian soldiers and other fighters beheading four men from rival rebel factions.

Meanwhile, a radicalise­d student was yesterday sentenced to seven years in prison for helping a friend go to Syria to fight while studying for his A-levels.

Abdullahi Ahmed Jama Farah, now 20, created a “hub of communicat­ion” for his “Mandem” group of like-minded extremists from his mother’s home in Manchester in 2013.

An Old Bailey trial found Jama Farah, who is Danish and of Somali origin, guilty of preparing for terrorist acts by attempting to facilitate Nur Hassan, 19, from Manchester, to travel to Syria.

Judge Michael Topolski told him the extent of his radicalisa­tion was “considerab­le”, saying: “Your support for jihad was global and offensive in nature and not defensive and limited to Syria.

“I am satisfied that what motivated you to assist was the very same set of extremist beliefs that motivated your friends to travel and train and fight and, if necessary, to die.”

The court heard that Jama Farah is the cousin of the so-called “teenage terror twins”, Zhara and Salma Halane, who at the age of 16 left their home in Chorlton, Manchester, and are believed to have married Isil fighters.

Jama Farah was in communicat­ion with four other friends abroad.

 ??  ?? The boy in the video alleged to be British, who is seen apparently killing captives
The boy in the video alleged to be British, who is seen apparently killing captives

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