- ISIS supporters launched sickening Twitter campaign after pilot's capture
- Called for brutal execution suggestions, prompting thousands of ideas
- Methods
suggested included burning alive and being run over with a bulldozer -
the techniques that featured in the gruesome murder video
- Thousands of other ideas were also shared by depraved supporters online
- Kasasbeh's 22-minute murder video emerged yesterday, showing his gruesome death in a bomb hit courtyard in ISIS stronghold Raqqa
- Burning and crushing ritual supposed to symbolise being killed in airstrike
Published:
10:56 GMT, 4 February 2015
|
Updated:
12:19 GMT, 4 February 2015
Thousands
of ISIS supporters took to Twitter in the days after Jordanian pilot
Moaz al-Kasasbeh was captured to suggest sick methods of execution -
including the two techniques that ultimately resulted in his death, it
emerged today.
Kasasbeh
was seen being burnt alive before being run over by a bulldozer in a
22-minute-long video released by the terror group yesterday, in which
the level of barbarism and brutality sunk to new lows, even by ISIS'
depraved standards.
The
method of murder raises the chilling prospect that ISIS may have been
influenced by the Twitter campaign, which used the Arabic hashtag
#SuggestAWayToKillTheJordanianPilotPig to elicit ideas from the terror
group's supporters.
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Brutal: The sickening decision to burn
Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh alive may have come from Twitter after
ISIS supporters launched a hashtag calling for execution ideas in the
days after his capture
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Captured: Kasasbeh was caught by ISIS
militants on December 24 when his F-16 fighter jet suffered mechanical
problems and crash-landed close to ISIS' Syrian stronghold and de facto
capital Raqqa
Horror: A Twitter user calling himself
Black Flag suggested using wild animals to execute Kasasbeh before
suggesting death by chainsaw or melting with acid as possible
alternatives.
No escape: The idea to place the pilot
in a cage may have come from a Twitter user calling himself Sham
Islamic Echo, who tweeted: '[I] suggest bringing a hungry crocodile and
put it in a cage with the pilot'
In
the days after Kasasbeh's capture - which occurred on December 24 when
his F-16 fighter jet suffered mechanical problems and crash-landed close
to ISIS' Syrian stronghold and de facto capital Raqqa - militants used
Twitter to crowd source ideas for his execution.
A
film clip featuring a woman who claimed to be the mother of a Syrian
man killed in a coalition airstrike suggested 'impalement, not with a
mercy shooting or a mercy knife.'
Another
horrific idea from a Twitter user calling himself Abu Ishaq
Sophistication was to either place Kasasbeh in a tank and set it alight,
or to use acupuncture needles dipped in acid to disfigure him, before
cutting of his head and sending it head back to Jordan.
A
second hashtag labelled #WeAllWantToSlaughterMoaz and carrying more
brutal execution ideas and videos of children killed in coalition
airstrikes, was retweeted over 11,000 times.
It
is not known whether any of those taking part in the campaign -
including the organisers of the hashtag - have any sway with the ISIS
leadership and whether any of the ideas influenced the eventual decision
to murder Kasasbeh by burning him alive.
But
what the horrific suggestions do show is the outrageous levels of
barbarism and hatred among ISIS' supporters, many of whom live in the
West, far from the terror group's self-declared caliphate.
It
is also important to note that following the gruesome video's release
ISIS supporters attempted to justify death by burning and bulldozer as a
similar fate met by those killed in an airstrike - suggesting bombing
victims are often burnt and crushed to death in their homes.
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Barbaric: An ISIS extremist lights a trail of petrol leading to the cage in which the 26-year-old stands
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Depraved: The flames reach the cage holding the helpless pilot. It is later flattened by a bulldozer
The
sickening Twitter campaigns appear to have been a reaction to the
hashtag #WeAreAllMoaz where individuals praised the pilot and offered
prayers and support for his family after his capture.
That original hashtag was retweeted more than 200,000 times and was supported by Queen Rania and Crown Prince Hussein of Jordan.
The early nature of the campaign suggests reports that ISIS executed Kasasbeh at the beginning of January may well be accurate.
Experts add that the slick, professionally shot 22-minute video would have taken some time to edit.
The
footage of Kasasbeh's eventual murder was laced with highly symbolic
imagery, not least the fact he appears to have been killed in a
rubble-strewn courtyard damaged by coalition war planes.
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Shocking: A film clip featuring a
woman who claimed to be the mother of a Syrian man killed in a coalition
airstrike suggested Kasasbeh be killed by 'impalement, not with a mercy
shooting or a mercy knife'
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Professional: Experts believe that
the slick, professionally shot 22-minute video of Kasasbeh's murder
would have taken some time to edit, suggesting he is likely to have been
killed in early January
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Jordanian officials have told the
devastated family of the 26-year-old (pictured) that they believed the
footage to be genuine and that the man branded a ‘hero’ in his homeland
was dead
Even by the Islamic State's barbaric standards, the terror group's latest execution video reached a truly depraved new low.
The footage shows the Jordanian pilot being burnt alive in scenes that are far too shocking to even consider publishing.
As
with previous beheading videos featuring British executioner Jihadi
John, the 22-minute-long clip is characterised by its slick production
values and graphics.
But
unlike the others, it contains an added cinematic dimension designed to
achieve unparalleled impact on the viewer - as if the horror of
watching someone torched to death wasn't enough.
ISIS
blames the F-16 fighter pilot for burning houses - and killing babies -
with airstrikes before he was captured in December.
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