Sunday People

IN PROPAGANDA WAR

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“I was fooled by IS promises. I have been so stupid and I want to make sure no one else falls into their trap.

“IS will say anything to get women over there. They lied to me and when I got there I saw for myself just how at Buckingham­shire University said: “The propaganda value of having a woman become a fighter for a cause which is against everything an enlightene­d woman would stand for makes a splash. It’s bad it was.” Mohammed has vowed to fly to Turkey with her British birth certificat­e in a bid to free her.

She will then be bought before a judge and will be sentenced for entering Turkey illegally. Tareena is being held madness that women could be targeted to fight for a state that treats them as sex slaves, denies them education or stones them to death for adultery.”

Female UK jihadists include Aqsa alongside suspected failed jihadists from 19 countries. Her fellow detainees have all been arrested entering or leaving Syria over the past month.

A Turkish court spokesman said: “She will be fined and deported and Mahmood, who this week allegedly encouraged terror acts on Twitter, and Khadijah Dare, who reportedly said she wants to be the first woman to behead a Western prisoner. her passport stamped so she can’t return to Turkey for the next five years.” But like Silhan, Tareena would then face a quiz by British authoritie­s on her return to the UK. The Europe-wide dragnet sparked by this month’s terrorist dramas in France and Belgium spread to Greece last night.

Police there detained four people over alleged links to an Islamist cell in Verviers, Belgium, where two suspected terrorists were shot dead and another arrested on Thursday. One of the men, aged 27, is alleged to have been in regular contact with the cell in the Belgian town. Sources said that Greek police had acted after a request from Interpol.

Belgian authoritie­s found that members of the Islamist cell in Verviers called a contact in Greece regularly.

Greek officers were given the identity of the man, who, like the three suspects in the Belgian raid, had recently returned from Syria after taking part in the conflict there.

Reports in Belgium suggested that the suspect in Greece was the brother of one of the alleged extremists and is thought to have been coordinati­ng the group’s movements.

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