British girl recruited online by Canadian
Intelligence and believed killed in Syria ‘was too scared to flee ISIS’
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/aug/12/british-girl-believed-killed-in-syria-was-too-scared-to-flee-isis
Sources say Kadiza Sultana feared being caught
and publicly executed if she tried to escape group’s stronghold of Raqqa
Jamie Grierson and Vikram Dodd Friday 12 August
2016 18.46 BST Last modified on Friday 12 August 2016 22.00 BST
http://www.911forum.org.uk/board/viewtopic.php?p=173376#173376
A London schoolgirl thought to have been killed
in an airstrike in Syria was fearful of the risks
involved in trying to rescue her from Islamic
State and could not “make the leap of faith”
needed to try to escape, sources have told the Guardian.
Kadiza Sultana, who left her home in Bethnal
Green, east London, during the half-term break in
February 2015 with friends Shamima Begum and
Amira Abase, is believed to have died in the
terror group’s stronghold of Raqqa earlier this year.
Sultana is thought to have become disillusioned
with life in Raqqa and had been considering
attempting to make her way back to Britain.
But sources on Friday said the former Bethnal
Green academy student feared the dangers of such
a plan failing were too high, and that she would
be caught and publicly executed, a fate that
befell an Austrian woman who tried to flee Isis.
Sultana would have been under extreme pressure to
remain in the battered city after swearing a
mandatory oath of allegiance to the Isis leader,
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, a counter-extremism expert said.
Fresh details of Sultana’s death came as
Rushanara Ali, the MP for Bethnal Green and Bow,
said her fate should prompt a full review of
Prevent, the government’s counter-terrorism strategy.
Her family heard in late June that Sultana may be
dead, following an airstrike that took place
around 22 June and hit a building in which there
was a financial office on the ground floor and
Sultana’s flat above, sources said.
A friend of Sultana’s – who was the first of four
girls from the Bethnal Green school to flee to
Syria – is understood to have notified the family.
When considering a plan to flee Syria, one issue
on Sultana’s mind would have been to enter
Kurdish-controlled territory, which could be
dangerous if the Kurds believed she was affiliated with Isis.
Haras Rafiq, managing director of
counter-extremism thinktank Quilliam, said she
would have also felt the weight of an oath –
known as bayah or bayat – sworn to the terror group’s leader.
“When they get over there, the very first thing
they have to do is to give bayah to Baghdadi,” he said.
“Giving bayah to Baghdadi is an oath of
allegiance which can only broken by death. So
once you join Isis, one you’ve given bayah, you
can’t leave – you’re not allowed to leave.
“The only way you can leave is if you’re sent on a mission, or if you die.”
Rafiq said research showed that the majority of
women who have fled to Syria – earlier this year
counter-terror police said about 56 women and
girls had travelled there from the UK – end up
disillusioned with life under Isis rule.
“One of the biggest factors of disillusionment
right now is the constant bombardment of airstrikes,” he said.
“The constant having to run, to hide, to retreat. It’s dangerous.”
He added: “People are dying and they’re seeing their friends die around them.”
Life under Isis also presents a cultural shock,
he said. “When they go out there, they do feel
they’re part of the cause. They have something,
which they didn’t have here. They find that
empowering and in some cases liberating.
“But then when there’s no TV, then when there’s
no social media, then when there’s people who
don’t speak English and you don’t speak Arabic,
then you haven’t got the creature comforts you
had at home, then you start feeling disillusioned.”
Ali, a Labour MP, told BBC Radio 4’s Today
programme on Friday that she had deep concerns
about Prevent, which funds local authority
schemes aimed at preventing people from becoming involved in extremism.
“Many have concerns about how Prevent is being
implemented, concerns about young Muslims being
stigmatised. There needs to be a balance struck
to protect young people, to prevent them from
being radicalised, but also making sure teachers
and other agencies have the proper advice training and support,” she said.
“I have huge concerns about some of the ways in
which it’s implemented; some of it can be quite
misguided. The government needs to do a proper
assessment of what’s working and what’s not and
listen to the Muslim community and the dangers the Muslim community face.”
The loss of the three girls, who followed a
friend who had earlier left for Syria, was a
severe blow to the Muslim community in east
London and a powerful indication of how strong the lure of Isis can be.
They plotted the trip together, according to
material recovered by investigators, making a
shopping list of items to take with them and then deceiving their families.
The items for their escape to Syria ranged from a
mobile phone to underwear, makeup and an
epilator. Plane tickets to Turkey were listed at
just over £1,000. The list appears to be
consistent with an Isis online guide for potential recruits.
All four girls married fighters approved by Isis
– including an Australian and a US national – and
two became widows within months of arriving in Syria, their families were told.
In March last year, the Metropolitan police
commissioner, Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, said the
teenagers could return home without fear of being
prosecuted for terrorism, as long as no evidence
emerged of them being engaged in violence.
Spy’s statement reveals his links with Canada and ISIS
DAILY SABAH ISTANBUL Published March 15, 2015
http://www.dailysabah.com/investigations/2015/03/15/spys-statement-reveals-his-links-with-canada-and-isis
Leaks from Mohammed al-Rashed's police statement
published in Turkish media outlets revealed how
he aided three UK girls and other foreign
nationals to cross into Syria to join the
self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS).
Rashed was apprehended on February 28 by
Turkish security forces. Along with many
documents and information found on his possession
and in his laptop, a video showing Rashed aiding
three missing British girls, Shamima Begum, 15,
Amira Abase, 15, and Kadiza Sultana, 16, was also found.
According to the police statement, Rashed came
into contact with Canadian officials in 2013 when
he sought for asylum in Canada. Rashed said that
Canadian officials asked for information
regarding ISIS' operations in return for citizenship.
Rashed said in his statement that he was
working for the Canadian government in exchange
for citizenship. "While I was working in a
hospital in Raqqa, I was collecting information
from the wounded regarding ISIS operations. I was
handing this information to Canadian Embassy in
Jordan. In order to do this, I was going to
Jordan via Istanbul and giving the information to
Canadian Embassy officials recorded in my laptop.
I was delivering passport information, baggage
tags and other details of the ones who came (to
join ISIS from abroad) to my embassy contacts. I
was also transmitting information to the same
place via Internet. Along with three missing
girls, I had also sent the information of 12
people which I aided them to cross into Syria, to
the Canadian Embassy. My aim was to learn which
ways are being used by the ones who want to join
ISIS and transfer this information to the Canadian government, " Rashed said.
Regarding the costs of his operation, Rashed
said that cost of his plane tickets was covered
by the Canadian Embassy in exchange for receipts.
"The people who I aided for crossing into Syria
were covering my bus tickets" he added.
Stating that all his operations are recorded in
his laptop, Rashed said that during the period he
was in Turkey, he helped the U.K. nationals the
most to cross into Syria. He said that he also
aided South Africans, Indonesians, Australians and Nigerians.
Rashed also admitted giving detailed
information regarding his ISIS contacts. "Abu
Kaka, a British national located in Raqqa, was
sending the information of those who wanted to
cross into Syria through WhatsApp. Those who were
coming from foreign countries were also
contacting me through Abu Kaka. I took three
British girls from Istanbul Esenler Coach Station
and bought their tickets, and delivered them to
Abu-Bakr in Gaziantep. Abu-Bakr was finding
private vehicles for people to cross into Syria,
" Rashed said in his statement.
Rashed stated that he was contacting with a
person named "Matt" at the Canadian Embassy and
"Matt" was handing over Rashed's information to his superior "Claude."
Rashed also revealed the money traffic between
ISIS and its sympathizers abroad, as many bank
receipts were found in his possession. "The money
was being sent to me, and I was sending the money
to my brother in Raqqa via a jeweler in
Sanliurfa. Abu Kaka's men were picking them up from my brother, " Rashed said.
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter
--
--
Please consider seriously the reason why these elite institutions are not discussed in the mainstream press despite the immense financial and political power they wield?
There are sick and evil occultists running the Western World. They are power mad lunatics like something from a kids cartoon with their fingers on the nuclear button! Armageddon is closer than you thought. Only God can save our souls from their clutches, at least that's my considered opinion - Tony
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"PEPIS" group. Please feel free to forward it to anyone who might be interested
particularly your political representatives, journalists and spiritual leaders/dudes.
To post to this group, send email to pepis@googlegroups.com
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to pepis-unsubscr...@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/pepis?hl=en
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "PEPIS" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email
to pepis+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.