- Ebu Tejma, 33, who lived in Vienna on benefits arrested over claims he recruited 166 young Europeans to join jihad for ISIS
- Includes
Samra Kesinovic, 17 and Sabina Selimovic, 16, who became ISIS 'poster
girls' after they ran away to become brides for terror fighters
- Tejma is also accused of raising 'significant' amount of cash for ISIS
Published:
15:47 GMT, 10 December 2014
|
Updated:
20:53 GMT, 10 December 2014
An
alleged Islamic hate preacher has been arrested over claims he is the
terror mastermind who recruited the two Austrian jihad 'poster girls'
and more than 160 others who joined ISIS.
Samra
Kesinovic, 17, and Sabina Selimovic, 16, became radicalised through the
cell led by unemployed benefits claimant Ebu Tejma, 33, who lived with
his pregnant wife and five children in a council flat in Vienna,
Austria.
It
was stuffed with jewellery, cash and savings books worth a fortune when
it was stormed by Austria's elite heavily-armed police special forces
team WEGA.
Scroll down for video
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Poster
girls: Samra Kesinovic, 17, (left) and Sabina Selimovic, 16, (right)
became radicalised through the cell led by unemployed benefits claimant
Ebu Tejma
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A picture believed to show Sabina
Selimovic, 15, with jihadi fighters in Syria: An interview given by the
Austrian teenager saying how she feels 'she can really be free' among
the extremists may have been given at gunpoint. It is claimed they now
want to return home - but it is too late
The
valuables had all been provided by Muslims radicalised by the preacher
and his cronies in a network that reportedly extended across the country
and into the rest of Europe.
His arrest has been seen as a major blow against the terrorist group's activities.
According
to security forces, Ebu Tejma, whose real name is Mirsad Omerovic, not
only recruited the two girls that became the public face of jihad - but
was also involved in a further 166 defections of European youngsters to
fight in holy war.
It's also claimed he raised a 'significant' amount of cash for terrorists.
Security
service insiders claim that he was not only one of 200 leading
jihadists, but was also one of the leaders of the so called 'Bosnian
cell' based in the Meidling district of Vienna that was 'one of the most
important logistic and financial support centres for jihadist
activities in Europe', according to a 'Vecernje novosti', a local
newspaper in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Austria
has been concerned for years over fears that the country was becoming a
hub for terrorist activities after inviting thousands of Muslim
refugees into the country during the breakup of the former Yugoslavia.
The
moved provided a fertile breeding ground for Ebu Tejma and his network.
The influential Austrian newspaper the Krone, claimed that 'there was
scarcely a single recruit in Europe for Jihad in which he and his group
were not involved'.
Originally
from the small Serbian town of Tutin, Tejma was known in Bosnia and
Herzegovina as a preacher of hatred and intolerance, who very soon found
himself allied with the extreme form of Islam known as Wahabism.
According
to Austrian anti-terrorism authorities, Tejma appeared on their radar
more than three years ago, when he began uploading videos onto his
YouTube channel.
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Hate preacher: Tejma would approach
fathers at Friday prayers and tell them it was their duty to provide
wives for fighters in Iraq and Syria, it is claimed
Although
officially unemployed, he was observed driving expensive fast cars. For
the past two years, intelligence officials have been tapping his
communications, monitoring his phone calls and building up a picture of
his network - which then prompted the arrests on Friday November 28.
One of those connections is allegedly a direct line to the caliph of ISIS terrorism, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Investigators saw a constant stream of Salafist Muslims while monitoring the Altun Alem mosque during their operation on Tejma.
Salafism
is the fastest-growing Islamic movement in the world. It is rooted in
the 19th century where it emerged as a way of combating the spread of
European ideas and values.
But
in recent years, it has come to be associated with the jihad of
extremist groups that advocate the killing of innocent civilians.
Security
services recorded a constant stream of Salafist preachers, often
accompanied by Mujahedin fighters travelling up from Bosnia and
Herzegovina, to the mosque and the imam has been appearing in online
videos revealing that it is every Muslim's duty to join jihad if an
Islamic state is under attack from non-believers.
It
is not even necessary to ask parents for permission, because even that
normally essential parental duty takes second place to the duty to
fight.
This is exactly what happened in the case of Samra and Sabina, who left only a note for their worried parents.
It
was at underground mosques like these that the teenage girls were
recruited and the signs were there that they were in danger even before
they fled.
Messages painted on the walls at school urging fellow believers to follow the call to jihad were traced back to the girls.
Nobody
heeded that warning until their parents discovered the notes in their
bedrooms. 'Don't look for us, we have gone to fight in the holy war.'
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Vanished:
The girls disappeared one day and just left notes to their parents in
their bedrooms. 'Don't look for us, we have gone to fight in the holy
war', they read
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Jihadi brides: The two girls in their new life in a pic posted online. They attended sermons given by Tejma
Meanwhile,
Samra and Sabina attended Tejma's sermons - in which he said it was a
woman's duty to support men fighting jihad. Tejma would even approach
fathers attending Friday prayers to tell them that he had many contacts
looking for wives.
Samra
and Sabina were radicalised within a few short months and travelled to
Syria to marry jihadists.Both girls have now revealed they made a
mistake, and desperately want to return home. But they are married
already, and also both reportedly pregnant, so the chances of ever
returning home or indeed seeing their parents seem remote.
Tejma
and 12 others were picked up in the raids involving hundreds of
officers. They have been remanded in custody for a further two weeks
while the investigations continue.
According
to state prosecutor Hansjoerg Bacher, the charges they are being
investigated over are on suspicion of membership of a terrorist
organisation, in 'connection with the recruiting of young people for the
civil war in Syria'.
The
lawyer for Tejma denies all the charges while police and prosecutors
sift through the evidence, and begin questioning his associates.
Publicly
they say they have struck a major blow against a likely terrorist
network - but the arresting officers are clearly worried that there may
be others at large.
Read more:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2865316/The-terror-mastermind-recruited-Austrian-ISIS-poster-girls-got-160-join-jihad-Syria-Iraq.html#ixzz3LbSZb8Qt
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