SUPPORT ISRAEL BY SHARING OUR ARTICLES

Post Image
svgadminsvgJune 15, 2015svgNews

3 British Sisters Feared to Have Joined Jihadists in Syria

Three British sisters are feared to have travelled with their nine children to join up with jihadists in Syria, a lawyer for the children’s parents said Monday, according to AFP.

The family, from Bradford in northern England, went missing after travelling to Medina in Saudi Arabia for an Islamic pilgrimage, the report said.

Sisters Sugra Dawood, 34, Zohra Dawood, 33, and Khadija Dawood, 30, travelled to Medina with their children, aged three to 15, on May 28.

They were due to return to Bradford on Thursday, but they broke off all contact with their family back in Britain two days earlier.

Preliminary inquiries suggest at least 10 members of the family boarded a flight from Medina to Istanbul — a commonly used route into Syria.

There are no details of an eight-year-old and a five-year-old member of the party boarding the same flight, noted AFP.

Balaal Khan, a lawyer for the children’s fathers, said it is understood the sisters have a relative fighting for either Islamic State (ISIS) or another extremist group in Syria, and it is feared they have met up with him.

“The fathers are distraught, they feel helpless and they don’t know what to do. They want the children out of harm’s way,” he was quoted as having said.

“They are concerned that their children’s lives are in danger. The suspicion, and main concern, is that the women have taken their children to Syria.”

The local West Yorkshire Police force has launched an investigation, saying they were working with foreign authorities.

There have been several instances where Britons went to Syria to join jihadists. Several months ago, three London schoolgirls fled Britain to join up with ISIS through Turkey.

Following that incident, Britain introduced new laws to try to stop airlines carrying passengers who may be travelling to join the ISIS.

Security services estimate some 600 Britons have gone to Syria or Iraq to join militant groups, including the man known as “Jihadi John” who has appeared in several ISIS beheading videos. 

svgYemen's Al-Qaeda Leader Reportedly Killed in American Airstrike
svg
svgKotler: My Remarks About 'Herd of Beasts' Were Misunderstood