- Ismail Jabbar, 22, is waging bloody jihad with 'Unit Bin Laden' in Syria
- He also incites fellow Muslims to murder soldiers and police back in UK
- The ex-House of Fraser trainee disappeared from Britain nine months ago
- Smuggled himself into war-torn country as Kalashnikov-wielding jihadist
- MI5 and police are monitoring his movements via extreme online posts
- Parents have begged him to return to UK - but he wants to die a 'martyr'
Published:
21:16 GMT, 31 May 2014
|
Updated:
10:43 GMT, 1 June 2014
A young
British Muslim who fled his suburban upbringing and travelled abroad to
become a fanatical terrorist can today be unmasked by The Mail on
Sunday.
London-born
Ismail Jabbar, 22, is fighting for the ‘Unit Bin Laden’ of violent
Islamic extremists in Syria, where he boasts of killing his enemies.
A
former trainee with the House of Fraser store, he also incites fellow
Muslims to murder soldiers, police officers and unbelievers back in
Britain.
WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT
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Face of evil: London-born Ismail Jabbar is fighting for the 'Unit Bin Laden' of violent Islamic extremists in Syria
He
disappeared from the UK nine months ago and smuggled himself into the
war-ravaged country as a Kalashnikov-wielding jihadist who revels in
bloodshed and has used a series of aliases to hide his true identity.
He is the only known British extremist to give a full account of fighting in Syria.
MI5
and the police have been monitoring his movements via the series of
extreme online posts he has made on websites such as Twitter, Facebook
and Ask.fm.
The
Mail on Sunday has been told that this self-proclaimed terrorist and
murderer will be arrested if he ever returns to the UK for inciting
extremism as well as travelling abroad to commit terrorist acts.
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A more innocent time: The ex-House of Fraser
trainee also incites fellow Muslims to murder soldiers, police officers
and unbelievers back in Britain. Above, Jabbar is pictured, left and
right, as an ordinary London student
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Holy war: The 22-year-old tweeted this picture, accompanied by the message 'I testify', just two days ago
Evidence of his extremism, compiled by this newspaper, include:
- Posting
graphic images of ‘enemies’ he claims his group has killed, including a
severed head and body parts, and one of himself apparently standing on a
corpse in uniform.
- Inciting
fellow British Muslims to launch ‘lone-wolf’ style attacks like that on
soldier Lee Rigby, who was hacked to death outside his barracks in
Woolwich, South London.
- Defending
the two murderers of Rigby and urging followers to ‘clench a knife...
and go stab a soldier’ or ‘chop couple pig heads in the streets of
London’, believed to be a reference to the police.
- Justifying attacks on UK civilians as well as urging bomb attacks on targets like petrol stations.
- Fighting
for a notorious Al Qaeda-linked group called Al-Nusra Front, and
encouraging friends to leave the UK and join him for jihad.
To
the horror of his parents – who are begging him to return to Britain –
Jabbar has said that he wants to die in Syria as a ‘shaheed’ [martyr],
while attempting to create an Islamic state with strict sharia law.
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A
family source said: ‘It’s been very stressful. No father or mother
should have to go through this. I pray for every mother and father who
have lost their son like us. I pray for them to come back.’
After
telling friends he was travelling to Syria as part of an aid convoy,
Jabbar trained with terrorists and has now formed his own group, the
Unit Bin Laden, amid the chaos of a bloody civil war that has already
cost more than 150,000 lives.
Jabbar’s
case has come to light as David Cameron prepares to tighten the law so
that more British jihadis will face prosecution for committing terrorist
acts overseas.
The
law change – to be announced in the Queen’s Speech this week – is in
response to fears that Britons becoming radicalised in countries such as
Syria present the greatest threat to Britain’s national security.
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Highlighting
the scale of the threat, just yesterday, two young men suspected of
trying to aid Syrian rebels were arrested in separate incidents at
Heathrow.
A
19-year-old was held by counter-terrorism officers at the airport on
suspicion of preparing for acts of terrorism while a 20-year-old was
seized over allegations of sending money overseas for the purposes of
assisting terrorism in Syria.
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