Sunday, July 6, 2014

Manchester teen twin sisters crept out of bedrooms and flew to Syria to join Isis | Mail Online

Manchester teen twin sisters crept out of bedrooms and flew to Syria to join Isis | Mail Online


  • 16-year-olds flew from Manchester International to Istanbul, Turkey
  • Parents woke at 8am to find both missing, girls then contacted from Syria
  • Family of 11 children 'moved from Somalia to Britain 10 years ago'
  • Girls are believed to have followed their brother who is an ISIS fighter
  • Counter terrorism teams are working to trace the girls and bring them back
    Fighting: Counter-terrorist teams fear two 16-year-old Muslim girls have joined ISIS fighters in Syria after fleeing their bedrooms in Manchester last week
  • Twin sisters have fled their home in Manchester to join ISIS fighters in Syria, it is feared.
    The 16-year-old girls crept out of their bedrooms in the middle of the night, grabbed their passports and flew to Istanbul in Turkey.
  • By the time their parents found their beds empty at 8am last Thursday and called police, they were found to be on their way to Syria.
    Counter-terrorism forces were then alerted when the girls contacted their family from Syria, where their elder brother is believed to be a jihadi fighter.
    After 10 days of investigations, detectives are still struggling to track them down.
    Greater Manchester Police said: 'The girls flew from Manchester International Airport to Istanbul.
    'Since their departure the girls have been in contact with their family.
    'We are attempting to confirm their current location and secure the well-being of both girls.'
    The family, of Somalian origin, is believed to have moved to Britain 10 years ago.
    According to The Sun on Sunday, the strictly religious schoolgirls have told their family they are not coming home.
    'The family have been trying to persuade their daughters to come home but so far they have said they are happy to stay,' a source told the paper.

    Police are now probing where the girls got the money to fly to the Middle East.
    The sixth formers' disappearance comes as the Home Office battles to counter calls from ISIS to British teenagers to join them.
    Extremists have used Twitter and YouTube to reach out to young Muslims across the world.
    British fighters: Reyaad Khan and Nasser Muthana appeared in this ISIS recruitment video earlier this month
    British fighters: Reyaad Khan and Nasser Muthana appeared in this ISIS recruitment video earlier this month
    And on Friday, ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi emerged from relative recluse to issue a plea for all Muslims to 'obey' him in his quest for world domination.
    A video of Baghdadi’s sermon at the Great Mosque in Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, was released on the internet yesterday and went viral instantly on jihadist forums and websites.
    Speaking from the pulpit of the mosque, Baghdadi, 42, urged the world’s Muslims to flock to the new Islamic caliphate. He praised the victory of his 14,000 fighters spread across Iraq and Syria.
    This month, a video emerged of three British fighters gushing about their life in Iraq.
    Among them was aspiring jihadi Aseel Muthana, who told the BBC he was fighting in Syria and had no intention of returning to the UK.
    His brother Nasser appeared with two other British men - 20-year-old Reyaad Khan, from Cardiff, and Abdul Raqib Amin, who grew up in Aberdeen.
    Calls: ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, issued a plea for the world's Muslims to 'obey' his quest for domination
    Calls: ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, issued a plea for the world's Muslims to 'obey' his quest for domination
    In April, the Metropolitan Police issued a plea for people to come forward with information about their family members if they were concerned about them joining terrorist training camps in Syria.
    And a British Jihadi who claims he is fighting alongside militants in Syria has said he will return to the UK when he sees 'the black flag of Islam' hanging over Buckingham Palace.
    The man, who called himself Abu Osama, said he had been taking part in military training, making bombs and fighting with the extremist Al-Nusra Front, which is linked to al Qaida, for the past year.
    Osuma, whose accent suggested he comes from the north of England, claimed to have been fighting for the establishment of a caliphate - which he referred to by the Arabic term Khilafah - across the Islamic world.
    He told BBC 5 Live's Nicky Campbell: 'There is nothing in Britain - it is just pure evil.
    'If and when I come back to Britain it will be when this Khilafah - this Islamic state - comes to conquer Britain and I come to raise the black flag of Islam over Downing Street, over Buckingham Palace, over Tower Bridge and over Big Ben.'
  • No comments:

    Post a Comment