The New Zealand Herald

Govt ‘lost contact’ with Kiwi rebel

PM says it is likely man the Syrian regime calls a ‘mercenary’ has been killed in country’s civil war

- Isaac Davison politics isaac.davison@nzherald.co.nz

Prime Minister John Key says the Government “lost contact” with a New Zealander who is believed to have been killed fighting in Syria. The unidentifi­ed man would be the first New Zealand casualty in the Syrian civil war, where a small group of Kiwis has joined the rebel forces.

A Syrian Government representa­tive at the United Nations in New York said on Sunday that a New Zealander was among the foreign “mercenarie­s” and “terrorists” who had died while fighting government troops.

Mr Key said yesterday that he was told in January there was “a high probabilit­y” a New Zealander had

Also known as Muslim bin John, Jones was killed by a drone strike in Yemen in November after joining an alQaeda group and attending a training camp. New Zealand spy agencies may have contribute­d informatio­n which led to the drone strike. His death was confirmed by DNA evidence.

Believed to have been killed in Syria while fighting against Bashar al-Assad’s regime. Lived in New Zealand at some point, but may have left for the Middle East from Australia. been killed while fighting in the region. He could not rule out other New Zealand deaths in Syria.

There was no firm evidence of the man’s death but “we’ve lost contact with him and his family has lost contact with him”, the Prime Minister said.

“We haven’t had any evidence since January that the person’s alive and on that basis there is a reasonably high probabilit­y the person’s died.”

Mr Key would not reveal what forms of contact the Government had with the expat New Zealander.

Details about the rebel fighter were scarce. He spent some time in New Zealand but may have departed to the Middle East from Australia.

A “handful” of New Zealanders were believed to be fighting in the Middle East, said Mr Key, and others had been blocked from going there by having their passports cancelled under national security provisions. He said if any of these people returned to New Zealand they could be monitored.

The man killed in Syria had no known connection to another New Zealander, Daryl Jones, who was killed by a drone strike in Yemen in November after joining an al-Qaeda terror cell. Australian media last week claimed another man killed in that drone strike, Australian Christophe­r Harvard, met Jones at a Christchur­ch mosque, where he was radicalise­d.

Asked to respond to these allegation­s of radical preaching in New Zealand, Mr Key said intelligen­ce authoritie­s targeted individual­s, not mosques.

“It doesn’t happen because we have a feeling, it happens because we have very strong informatio­n which would support a warrant being authorised. And then that warrant has to be co-signed by the commission­er and myself. So we don’t just get up in the morning and say ‘maybe in this location we might be a bit worried so let’s have a look’.”

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