logo
Man who went to Syria guilty of joining al Qaida-linked group

Man who went to Syria guilty of joining al Qaida-linked group

Despite pleas from his family, Giga did not return to the UK for nine years and was arrested upon his arrival on a flight from Turkey last May.
Following a trial at the Old Bailey, he was found guilty of preparation of terrorist acts between August 31 2015 and August 31 2016 by travelling to Syria to fight with the Jaysh Al Fath groups.
The court heard how Giga had left the home he shared with his parents and sister in Hounslow, west London, in August 2015 and informed them he had gone to Syria for jihad.
On September 11 2015 – the anniversary of the 9/11 terror attacks in the United States – he told his sister: 'I have come here to fight for jihad. I'm based in Idlib province and I fight for Jaysh al Fath which is the rebel coalition which includes the Free Syrian Army up to al Qaida-linked groups.
'I have come here to fight against (Bashar) Assad and also to fight against Isis. I can't sit at home when fellow Muslims are in need and their religion is in danger.'
His father responded: 'Please don't do anything that will break my or your mother's or family's heart, stay within the bounds of true Islam and humanity, stay away from extremism and follow the Sunnah.'
But in a further message to his sister, Giga said he had finished his training and had been given the 'opportunity to fight on the front line in the near future'.
He told her: 'I hope more than anything to gain martyrdom while fighting against Isis or against the Assad regime but I fear death as much as anyone else so I am in need of your duas (prayers).'
The court heard that Giga's father did everything he could to try to convince his son to return home and travelled to Reyhanli, a small Turkish town close to the Syrian border.
In a letter to Giga from the border, he wrote: 'I have promısed your mum that somehow I will try my best to convince you to come out of there, and we will settle down anywhere in this world where you feel comfortable and happy…
'Can you for one minute imagine what the rest of her life will be like if something was to happen to you? Isa, her life wıll be destroyed and so will all of ours.
'It is on that basis I beg you to stay safe and come out of there immediately. And stay away from the front line because the Russians are using all kınds of firepower.'
However, Giga appeared to be set on 'martyrdom', the court heard.
Then in December 2015, Giga told his sister that he planned on doing charity work – although the organisation concerned had no record of it – and by August 2016 contact with his family petered out.
Eight years later, Giga was issued an emergency passport by the British Consulate in Istanbul.
Police were waiting when Giga arrived at Heathrow Airport on a Turkish Airlines flight on May 23 2024.
Following his arrest, Giga made no comment in police interviews but in a prepared statement denied he had travelled to Syria to fight or join any groups.
He claimed he had lied to his family about doing charity work, training, fighting and joining groups because he thought they would struggle to understand the idea of going there simply to live.
Giving evidence in his Old Bailey trial, Giga maintained that he had gone to Syria only to live in an Islamic state.
A jury deliberated for 10 hours and 26 minutes to reject his version of events and find him guilty by a majority of 11 to one.
Judge Mark Lucraft KC ordered a report and adjourned sentencing to October 17.
Commander Dominic Murphy, head of the Met's Counter Terrorism Command, said: 'We have been clear for some time now that anyone returning to the UK suspected of being involved in any terrorist-related activity overseas will be thoroughly investigated.
'We work very closely with other partners and agencies here in the UK and overseas in order to do this and help keep the public safe.
'As this case shows, we will always arrest those who return to the UK after fighting for a terrorist group, no matter how long it has been since they left the country.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Derry protestors who defy ban in support of Palestine Action accused of offences under Terrorism Act
Derry protestors who defy ban in support of Palestine Action accused of offences under Terrorism Act

Belfast Telegraph

time14 hours ago

  • Belfast Telegraph

Derry protestors who defy ban in support of Palestine Action accused of offences under Terrorism Act

It comes as more than 200 people have been arrested in central London at the largest demonstration relating to Palestine Action since the group was proscribed as a terrorist organisation. Hundreds of people gathered in Parliament Square for a demonstration organised by the campaign group Defend Our Juries, who said 'approximately 1,000 sign-holders' had turned up. The government outlawed Palestine Action last month under terrorism laws, with membership carrying a maximum sentence of 14 years in prison. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said violence and criminal damage had no place in legitimate protest, and Palestine Action's activities, including breaking into an RAF base and spraying two aircraft with red paint, justified the ban. Palestine Action has increasingly targeted Israel-linked companies in Britain. It accuses the government of complicity in Israeli war crimes and genocide in Gaza. Derry IPSC (Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign) said some of its activists had letters hand-delivered from the PSNI on Friday evening. That came ahead of a protest in Guildhall Square to 'lift the ban on Palestine Action', where a group of protestors again defied the ban by holding signs that read: 'I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action.' They included at least one of the Bloody Sunday families, while civil rights veteran Eamonn McCann was also in attendance. The PSNI said it has 'grounds to suspect they have committed offences contrary to Section 13 of the Terrorism Act 2000' during the 'Defend the Right to Protest' protests on July 19 and 26. Derry IPSC added: 'We wonder how many such notices have been given to all those carrying UVF flags in recent weeks. 'We won't be intimidated or dissuaded, they cannot arrest us all, we are all Palestine action! 'This hand delivered on a Friday night before our protest tomorrow clearly suggests they want to put people off joining us tomorrow, an obvious attempt at intimidation.' Israel's security cabinet backs plans to take over Gaza City A letter from the PSNI shows that the accused were invited to respond to an email address to arrange an interview as 'a voluntary attendee'. It adds: 'Failure to make contact with the police to arrange a suitable date for interview, within ten days of receipt of this letter, may result in you being reported to the Public Prosecution Service without the opportunity to provide your account.' This follows People Before Profit councillor in Derry, Shaun Harkin, being charged by the Public Prosecution Service for participating in a pro-Palestine protest. Shaun informed the PSNI he would not be accepting a PPS caution for participating in a Derry City Centre protest on the 17 February 2024 because he 'did nothing wrong and was prepared to go to court to prove this'. Mr Harkin said: "The people of Gaza are being starved to death and pushed into a Rafah concentration camp. 'Every action to stop the Gaza genocide is an act for humanity against barbarism. 'The PPS and the PSNI should be focused on identifying those in Westminster and Stormont who have incited support for Israel as it carries out war crimes and government bodies providing funding for business organisations to make parts for F-35 murder jets that are being used to kill tens of thousands of Palestinian children. 'Israel's supporters have lost all legitimacy. They can no longer defend or hide the barbarism they support, so they are trying to silence the mass global movement opposed to genocide.'

‘I live for a chance to leave Iraq': how I survived torture and slavery at the hands of Islamic State
‘I live for a chance to leave Iraq': how I survived torture and slavery at the hands of Islamic State

The Guardian

time21 hours ago

  • The Guardian

‘I live for a chance to leave Iraq': how I survived torture and slavery at the hands of Islamic State

My childhood living in a village in northern Iraq near the city of Mosul was rich in happiness despite the lack of resources. I was fond of my school and friends and enjoyed a warm family life filled with laughter. That all vanished when Islamic State forces invaded our area. When we heard of their approach [IS took control of large areas of northern Iraq and its second biggest city, Mosul, in 2014], we tried to escape but were surrounded by five IS vehicles. The men were separated and they took my father and one of my cousins and shot them in front of us. At the time, aged nine, I was far too young to witness such a scene. I vividly remember crying bitterly out of fear, feeling as though this wasn't reality but a dream. Even now, I cannot rid myself of the shock and the sound of bullets as my father and cousin were killed. We have never found their bodies. We were taken away and held captive until IS fighters came to our prison looking for young girls. One of them pulled my hair, beat me and pointed a gun at my head in front of everyone, threatening to kill me. My grandmother intervened, pleading with him to let me go, until I fainted from fear. When I regained consciousness, she told me that many girls had been taken to Syria, but not me. We continued to be moved along with large numbers of abducted girls. The older women used to hide us in wooden boxes or refrigerators whenever IS fighters stormed the place searching for us. We were soon moved to a nursery school, where we were forced to learn the Qur'an, pray and wear the niqab, despite our young age. The group holding us started conducting a lottery for the girls to determine their fate between enslavement, rape or domestic service. I was chosen to serve in the house of Abu Aisha, a senior IS leader, where I was subjected to torture and beatings. I was forced to clean his four houses and care for his children. His wife would complain about me and sometimes they would deprive me of food for days. He would beat me with chains and leave me shackled in the rain. Abu Aisha used to kill captives with knives and cleavers, and he trained his children to do the same. Every night, Abu Aisha would choose a Yazidi girl to rape, and I could hear their screams as it happened. Their voices ring in my ears to this day. Because I was so young, I was not raped. We were forbidden from speaking Kurdish, our mother tongue, or even Arabic. Communication was strictly in Turkmen because Abu Aisha and his family spoke Turkmen, a dialect of Turkish. 'You must speak like us,' they said. When the situation for IS in Mosul began to deteriorate [Iraqi forces retook the city in 2017], the group claimed they would allow us to return to our families, but there was a plan to kill us all. They gave us explosive belts and ordered us to wear them to blow ourselves up when we met our families. Luckily, my friend and I managed to cut the wires of the belts. It was a daring move because we had heard a lot about explosive belts and car bombs. To this day, I don't know how it didn't explode. Everything was a miracle. I can't believe how we escaped or endured all that torment. We had no emotions left. Sign up to Global Dispatch Get a different world view with a roundup of the best news, features and pictures, curated by our global development team after newsletter promotion Liberation wasn't the end of the suffering but the beginning of a new journey of psychological pain. I had partly lost my memory due to the brainwashing and couldn't even recognise my siblings. I tried to return to school, but I couldn't continue because of the psychological trauma. To this day, I suffer from nightmares and I hear the screams of the girls who were raped and tortured with me. I live waiting for a chance to leave Iraq in search of a new life, far from the nightmares of the past. I can no longer live here [in northern Iraq], or any place that reminds me of the past. Every corner of this town [Sinjar] reminds me of the hell I lived through. IS destroyed my childhood, my dreams and my future. The nightmares of the torture still haunt me, engraved in my memory, and yet most of the IS members who committed these crimes remain free. We, the survivors, are still trying to piece together what is left of our lives. They destroyed our lives, but where is justice? Produced in collaboration with Jummar, an independent Iraqi media platform. Edited by Mizar Kemal and Tom Levitt.

Drug terror gangs planning to flood Europe with ultra-addictive 'Jihadi speed'
Drug terror gangs planning to flood Europe with ultra-addictive 'Jihadi speed'

Daily Mirror

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mirror

Drug terror gangs planning to flood Europe with ultra-addictive 'Jihadi speed'

Terror groups in Syria are flocking to build up toppled despot Bashar al-Assad's evil captagon drug trade, swelling their war chests - but UK streets could be in their sites to target fresh addicts Middle East terror gangs are growing a multi-billion pound drug trafficking network which could flood Europe with a 'highly addictive' narcotic dubbed 'Jihadi speed.' There are heightened fears the captagon drug, developed by the toppled former Syrian despot Bashar al-Assad, will spread as far as UK streets within months. ‌ Deadly addictive pills, worth about £10 a tablet, have been uncovered in their millions being smuggled out of Syria, through Turkey and elsewhere then as far as the Netherlands. Iran-backed networks Hezbollah are in on the smuggling free-for-all along with Islamic State and al-Qaeda affiliates, selling the drug on to grow their vast war-chests. ‌ ‌ It is believed trade in captagon has expanded beyond the Middle East so much and into Europe that since Bashar al-Assad was toppled last year 1.1 tons of the drug was smuggled. Astonishing amounts of the drug have been found and one report seen by the Mirror suggests millions of pills were found in Douma, outside Damascus. A 60,000 pill seizure at Riyadh airport underlined the established smuggling network feeding the middle class drug consumption market across the Gulf States. But the illegal amphetamine type narcotic is highly popular with jihadi fighters as it keeps them awake and highly focused for days without sleep but it is also used by Arab elites. ‌ The Daily Mirror learned of the new alarm linked to Captagon in a newly released intelligence report which warns the Captagon trade is financing conflict across the Middle East. It is being used to arm terror networks, grow their bank balances and presents a multiple threat to western countries such as the United Kingdom. The new Syrian government, run by former rebel Ahmed al-Sharaa, is struggling to contain the multi-billion pound captagon cartels which are spreading beyond the region. Traditionally highly-addictive captagon was sold underground by Assad's family and flooded the rich party scene in places such as the United Arab Emirates. ‌ But a recently drafted intelligence report reveals: 'Amid rising sectarian conflict, there is very credible risk intelligence that opposition groups have turned to the captagon trade to finance their campaigns against the central government, including direction from Iranian/Shia proxies.' These groups such as Hezbollah and even Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps are known to have flooded Lebanon and beyond with captagon. And it has already reached parts of Europe. It is feared the drug - which helped fund Iran's shadowy Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and the Lebanese Hezbollah terror network is being exported by jihadist groups. ‌ Captagon factories disguised as legitimate enterprises under the Assad regime have gone underground and popped up in ungoverned areas of southern Syria. The pills are being smuggled out of the Middle East and into Europe inside electronic goods under the guise of legitimate exports in large lorries. One bust by Turkish security officers (pics) close to the Syrian border revealed assault rifles and 200,000 pills of captagon with a £2m street value. In Lebanon Hezbollah-related smugglers were found with 500,000 pills - street value £5 million - taking their drugs haul for transportation on the Mediterranean. ‌ Sources say it is already being smuggled out via Turkey, into Africa and has even reached as far as the Netherlands to feed western narcotics markets. One security source told the Daily Mirror: 'Inevitably it will reach the UK and have the dual effect of feeding addiction, increasing crime and it will also have a destabilising effect. 'There are known smuggling routes from the Netherlands into the UK and that has become a real danger for UK society - and the market is very lucrative. This is a multi-billion pound underground narco-marketplace but it is almost certainly being used to swell the war chests of terrorist groups like Islamic State. ‌ 'The known involved organisations involved are Iranian backed proxies such as Hezbollah and even the Syrian National Army but it is such a lucrative and now underground business that Islamic State is also taking advantage of the trade opportunities.' Our source told the Mirror that it is also suspected drug gangs have perfected the chemistry for growing narco-labs throughout Europe to make the drug more potent. The intelligence report warns that: 'Amid rising sectarian conflict, particularly evident in southern Syria over the past week, there is a credible risk that opposition groups have turned to the captagon trade to finance their campaigns against the central government. The drug, a stimulant that increases focus and wakefulness, has been abused by militants in battle and has fueled the party scene in gulf countries like the United Arab Emirates (UAE). ‌ 'Before Assad's fall, captagon exports propped up the Assad family and its patronage networks, presenting the sanctioned regime with an economic lifeline and a lever of regional influence and transforming Syria into a modern day narco-state. The regime flooded markets with the in-demand drug and only reduced flows in a tit-for-tat strategy in pursuit of economic and diplomatic normalization from neighboring countries. 'These groups, along with other previously uninvolved actors both inside Syria and abroad, collectively recognize an opportunity to engage in the captagon trade amid significant disruption to existing supply chains, while demand remains high. 'With prices elevated, the potential for substantial profit is considerable.' ‌ Syria has since 2011 post the Arab Spring being riven by conflict, started by an uprising against Assad's murderous regime which morphed into sectarian civil war. Islamic State gained traction in Syria , making their HQ in Raqqa, where they ruled with a bloodied sword, beheading and attracting foreign jihadis such as from the UK. One of the most notorious ISIS jihadi gangs was 'the Beatles' led by Londoner Mohamed Emwazi, AKA Jihadi John who became thr group's beheader-in -chief. Much of his gang including fellow Londoners Alexanda Kotey and El-Shafee el-Sheikh are now behind bars in high security prisons in the United States. Emwazi was believed to have beheaded US journalist James Foley - and then over subsequent months, similar filmed the killings of Steve Sotloff and Brits David Haines and Alan Henning. Investigators are unsure if the video nasties were all the work of one terrorist. Emwazi died aged 27 in Raqqa before the ISIS-held town was overrun by western-backed Kurdish forces. He had been targeted by a drone strike and died at the end of a Hellfire missile.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store