Gulf News

British ‘bouncy castle’ salesman may be militant in Daesh video

Dhar, known as Abu Rumaysah, is one of UK’s high-profile militants

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The masked militant in a Daesh video showing the killing of five men accused by the group of being Western spies is believed to be a Londoner known as Sid who once sold inflatable bouncers.

Siddhartha Dhar, who left for Syria from Britain while on police bail after his arrest on suspicion of belong to a banned group and encouragin­g terrorism, has been identified by media as the spokesman in the militant organisati­on’s latest film.

Dhar, who is also known as Abu Rumaysah, is one of Britain’s most high-profile militants and an associate of Anjem Choudary, Britain’s best-known Islamist preacher who is due to go on trial next week accused of terrorism offences.

A convert from Hinduism who lived in East London, Dhar regularly attended protests staged by the now banned organisati­on Al Muhajiroun and had often spoken to the media in support of radical militant causes.

Online videos

Since leaving Britain he gained further attention through online videos in which he exhorted life under Daesh.

In one posted on his YouTube website, titled ‘The beauty of the Sharia and the Caliphate’, he said: “I’ve grown up in the West, I’ve lived in the United kingdom all my life, I’ve seen what a democracy has to offer and quite frankly it’s quite oppressive.”

His sister Konika told British media the man in the video sounded just like her brother, echoing the views of others who knew him well.

However, neither she nor security experts said they could be certain it was him.

British intelligen­ce officials are analysing the film and a security source said they had not yet reached a conclusion as to the man’s identity.

British officials say up to 800 Britons have travelled to Iraq and Syria, some to join Daesh, and around half had returned home. About 70 were believed to have been killed.

In the 10-minute video released on Sunday, the masked man speaking with a clear British accent threatens British Prime Minister David Cameron before shooting one of the alleged spies in the head.

The footage was reminiscen­t of the gruesome beheadings shown in videos featuring Londoner Mohammad Emwazi, who gained worldwide notoriety as ‘Jihadi John’.

Robb Leech, who got to know Dhar while making a documentar­y about his own stepbrothe­r who was jailed for terrorism offences in 2013, said the militant in the video looked and sounded like Dhar. He said Dhar had never struck him as violent, and had always been friendly.

Arsenal fan

British newspapers said he used to sell children’s inflatable bouncers, known as bouncy castles in Britain, and was a fan of Arsenal soccer club and the rock group Nirvana.

“The last time I saw him it was about two months before he left and joined so-called Islamic State [Daesh] and we were laughing. It was very good natured,” Leech told BBC radio.

“To remember him like that and then see him supposedly in this video, I don’t understand that,” he said, adding that Dhar must have had some very significan­t experience­s in Syria with Daesh to make him capable of doing what he did.

“Because the guy who I knew was no more capable of it than you or I as far as I could tell.”

In one video on his YouTube site, Dhar distances himself to some extent from the killing of US and British citizens who were apparently beheaded by Jihadi John.

“I don’t want to see another James Foley or Steven Sotloff or David Haines but unfortunat­ely the way the West and the Europeans are going about things in terms of their policies with air strikes and intervenin­g in the caliphate, sadly I can’t see an end to this,” Dhar said.

 ?? Reuters ?? Face of terror? A picture shows a man identified by UK media as Siddhartha Dhar as he takes part in a demonstrat­ion outside the US embassy in central London, on September 11, 2011.
Reuters Face of terror? A picture shows a man identified by UK media as Siddhartha Dhar as he takes part in a demonstrat­ion outside the US embassy in central London, on September 11, 2011.

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