
Man who went to Syria guilty of joining al Qaida-linked group
Isa Giga, 32, resigned from his job as a technical support consultant job at a technology firm and bought a business class return flight to Turkey before crossing into wartorn Syria in August 2015.
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.

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STV News
17 minutes ago
- STV News
Man in terror probe said he would 'make 9/11 look like episode of Teletubbies'
A man held during a terror investigation claimed he would make the 9/11 attacks 'look like an episode of the Teletubbies'. Curtis Ross had a fascination with 'Unabomber' Ted Kaczynski – the lone wolf terrorist who killed three Americans and injured several others over nearly 20 years. The 24-year-old had been arrested after posting online a clip of him blowing up two gas canisters near the River Leven in Methil, Fife. Ross' home was raided, and police discovered a drawing marked 'Project Payback'. A phone and tablet device were also examined, which included the voice message about the 2001 Twin Towers atrocity and him discussing with others 'murdering all the people who wronged you'. Ross appeared at the High Court in Glasgow. He pleaded guilty to a charge of behaving in a threatening and abusive manner, which included sending concerning messages and voice notes on Snapchat and Facebook, causing an explosion, filming it and putting the footage on social media between June 25 and July 31, 2024. He had a not guilty plea to a charge under the Terrorism Act accepted. Ross was remanded in custody and will be sentenced at a later date. A Facebook friend of Ross spotted the explosion video in late July 2024. He showed it to a young woman who was so 'alarmed' that she contacted the police. Ross was held that day after being spotted in Methil. Detectives – along with Counter Terrorism officers – searched his home in the town. They found the 'Project Payback' drawing along with a sketch of what was described as a 'homemade explosive device'. Various items, including a roll of wire, mobile phone batteries, nails, screws, and a watch, were inside a desk. Initial fears about a package in the property led to homes in the area being evacuated, but it did not contain an explosive. Prosecutor Greg Farrell said Ross 'laughed' when first quizzed about what he had filmed, claiming it was an 'attempt at satire comedy'. But, he confirmed that he had blown up two butane gas canisters and had posted it on his Facebook page under the name of a Batman comic villain. Mr Farrell: 'He made reference to social media corrupting his decisions.' Ross was asked about his interest in Kaczynski – captured in 1996 – and said he was 'apparently some kind of mail bomber' that he had learned more about by going down a 'rabbit hole' online. Ross went on to insist that he himself was 'not a terrorist' as he had 'made peace with everything in his life'. But, police found a series of concerning messages during checks of his phone and black tablet. In late June 2024, he wrote to 15 users on Facebook Messenger: 'Here guys, I am just here to inform you that the only thing stopping you from murdering all of the people who wronged you is just a box. 'That is only if you cannot do it correctly and make sure enough evidence is gone so that the charges do not stick.' He referred to 'instructions on how to make a pipe bomb' adding: 'Hope this comes in handy for you one day x'. In messages on the day of the River Leven explosion, a social media contact called Ross 'a human'. Mr Farrell then told the court of a Snapchat conversation with a friend shortly before. Ross stated at one stage: 'I am going to make 9/11 look like an episode of the Teletubbies, f*** sake.' He then backtracked again, claiming it was 'satire comedy' and that he was 'only joking'. During further rants, Ross said he had been let down by the 'justice system', moaning he had been treated differently because he is a man. In messages to another contact, he said: 'I have realised that I simply cannot allow what is happening to humanity and our world to continue. 'I can and will have an impact on preventing the worst from happening xx.' The court heard there were also photos, videos and sketches of the 'Unabomber' on the devices as well as images of a pipe bomb and firearms together with 'various other clips which suggest violence'. Lord Colbeck deferred sentencing for reports. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country


Telegraph
an hour ago
- Telegraph
The hollowing-out of middle-class jobs like mine has left me lonely and terrified
My heart sank when I saw those damned words again: 'Thank you for your application but we have decided to move forward with other candidates.' As I read that sentence, four months of pain, humiliation, fear, and despair engulfed me, leaving me to stare dejectedly at the floor. I've read that soul-destroying sentence, and dozens of variations of it, more than 250 times since I lost my job as part of cuts at the media organisation at which I worked earlier this year. Each rejection has chipped away at my formerly bullet-proof confidence and peace of mind, leaving me wondering if I'll ever be useful to my family again? What is the point of me? Will my wife and son ever be able to look at me with pride? Struggling for work despite decades of experience, transferable skills and a reputation for being a smart, hard-working team player was not supposed to be in the script. Unemployment is worse than being stabbed The pain of being out of work, dealing with hundreds of rejections, and constant worry over how you will be able to provide for your family is far, far worse than being stabbed in the throat by Jihadist terrorists. I can say this with absolute authority because that is exactly what happened to me on 3 June 2017. Isis fanatics murdered eight innocent people during the London Bridge attack. I ended up being involved in it because earlier that evening, I helped a pub bouncer who was being assaulted by two drunks. That fateful decision put me in the path of the Isis fanatics, who attacked the restaurant we were in. While defending my friends, I was stabbed twice and left to die in a bloody heap on the floor. The odd thing about being stabbed in a life-or-death knife fight was that it did not immediately hurt. There was shock, but also a strange absence of pain, probably due to adrenalin. After my physical recovery, the relief of surviving, the support of my family, friends, Fleet Street colleagues and peers helped me to recover quickly, while counselling sessions and talking openly about my ordeal has helped keep the demons at bay, bar the odd nightmare. Unemployment is far worse. Not having a job, worrying about your family finances and the future… the guilt you feel about letting your wife, son, and parents down is crushing. Having fallen victim to job cuts twice in the space of 12 months, I feel mounting despair and fear that I am obsolete. The anguish and torment is relentless The guilt, fear, and worry, all of that anguish and torment, is present every single second of every single day. It is relentless and keeps me up at night. I am fortunate to have such a wonderful, supportive wife, Cecile, but there is no disguising the anger she feels towards all the companies that rejected me, including the publisher that released me last year after 17 years of distinguished service as part of a cost-cutting drive. She hides it, but she worries for the future. However, Cecile is extremely practical and so, while we are in a decent financial position now, we are starting to cut our expenses. My parents are worried, as is my extended family. The problem for Britain is that my situation is not unique: according to recruiters, we're in a 'white-collar jobs recession'. Experts warn that the growing use by businesses of artificial intelligence (AI) could compound this, resulting in job losses on a scale not seen since the deindustrialisation of Britain in the 1980s. When Margaret Thatcher became prime minister in 1979, Britain was regarded as the sick man of Europe. To fix that, Thatcher sought to tame inflation, which had hit 25 per cent at times during the 1970s. By sharply hiking interest rates and slashing public spending, she succeeded. However, it came at a cost. High interest rates reduced domestic consumption and business investment, hitting the economy and jobs. Worse, high rates strengthened sterling and made Britain's industrial sector, which started declining in the 1960s due to a widespread failure to invest and adapt, even more uncompetitive. British exports became more expensive and so manufacturing job losses accelerated. From 1970 to 1979, manufacturing employment had fallen from 7.7 million to 6.7 million. Between 1979 and 1983, 1.5 million manufacturing jobs were lost. In areas where there was a once dominant manufacturing employer which had shut down, demand fell for all the surrounding, dependent local businesses, further reducing employment. That in turn hit local finances, impacting the availability and quality of services such as schools and hospitals. Coupled with people moving to seek work elsewhere, it left communities trapped in a cycle of decline. The consequences of the deindustrialisation that devastated communities in the North, Midlands, Wales and across the country are still being felt today, decades after all those factories and plants shut, points out Valeria Rueda, assistant professor of economics at the University of Nottingham. For a start, when areas suffer wide-scale manufacturing job losses they also see increases in suicide rates, drug overdose and alcoholism. In the US, says Rueda, this phenomenon is called 'deaths of despair'. 'In certain contexts, worklessness can be lethal,' she explains. The loss of income and anxiety and stress that comes from unemployment does not just affect those who have lost their jobs, it impacts their children, as wealth is a key factor of health. 'Children of industrial decline' Rueda pointed to studies that show that the health of the children born in coal industry areas during its decline tend to be shorter, have more extreme weights and worse physical and mental health than those who grew up in other parts of the country. 'These are the 'children of industrial decline' and today they still carry the scars of growing up through hard times,' says Rueda. 'Their offspring – the third generation affected – also appear to be born with poorer health. 'The negative health effects of massive job losses can transmit across generations, putting at risk the fundamental democratic principle of equality of opportunity.' It come as 'no surprise' to Rueda that frustration has taken hold of people in areas that suffer from a chronic lack of economic opportunity, giving rise to popularism. 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'With this government, what we have had is an increase in employer national insurance contributions at the same time the national minimum wage is rising, as well as the changes coming in the Employment Rights Bill,' he continues. 'What we have is indigestion, in terms of the demands and work placed on employers at once.' The bursting of the post-pandemic boom by high interest rates, slower demand, higher costs and the economic uncertainty caused by US President Donald Trump upending global trading, as well as ongoing conflicts, has seen employers look to rein in their costs by cutting jobs and freezing recruitment. Probst agrees that the UK is now in a 'severe' white-collar jobs recession and that for middle-aged workers, finding work is much, much harder than it was previously. 'For middle-aged workers, if you want to change roles, it is very difficult as job postings are down and there is very little churn,' he says. Prime targets for efficiency drives Middle-aged people tend to occupy the rungs of middle management in white-collar roles and thus are the prime targets for efficiency drives, which invariably results in job cuts. However, business leaders warn that the children of those middle-aged, middle-class workers will increasingly struggle to get work. Combine the two, business leaders warn, and the economic and social damage will be comparable to that suffered in the 1980s. According to James Reed, chairman and chief executive of Reed recruitment agency, the increased burden on businesses is pushing them to embrace automation and the increasing use of AI to do what were traditionally white-collar jobs in order to save money. Reed's internal data shows that graduate vacancies, as a proportion of total available jobs, have halved, down from 8 per cent to 4 per cent, since 2018. This is because automation and AI is taking graduate jobs in industries such as finance, accounting and law, and as the technology becomes more powerful and more widespread, it will result in more job losses. 'We're heading for a jobs crisis like the 1980s,' says Reed. 'Lots of people are going to be left behind as a result. If we see the hollowing-out of white-collar work it will affect millions of people, their living standards and the Government's tax take. 'The consequences of this have yet to be properly thought through, but there will be social, economic and fiscal consequences,' he adds. The International Monetary Fund's managing director Kristalina Georgieva describes AI as a 'tsunami hitting the labour market'. She warns that 60 per cent of jobs in advanced nations such as the UK will in just a few years time be either 'enhanced, become more productive, or transformed, or eliminated'. In other words, the technology could benefit humanity, or it could result in unseen levels of inequality. 'What is happening with AI, it can be a great story, a world that becomes more productive,' says Georgieva. 'Or it can be a sad story, a world that is more divided where the 'Haves' have more and the 'Have Nots' are completely lost,' she says. 'AI is going to replace half of all white-collar workers' In June, I saw Ford chief executive Jim Farley deliver a blunt warning to parents at the Aspen Ideas Festival. He informed them that they need to make sure their children learn vocational skills for the 'essential economy' (basically anything that needs to be moved, built or fixed), as AI was going to wipe out millions of white-collar jobs. 'Hiring entry-level workers at tech companies has fallen 50 per cent since 2019,' noted Farley. 'Is this where we want our kids to go? AI is going to replace half of all white-collar workers.' While the effects of the 1980s job losses are still being felt today, Panmure Liberum's French hopes that the transition to an AI-enabled economy will not be as brutal or long lasting. 'In economies there is destruction and then creation in times of technological change, but it does not occur simultaneously, there a gap,' he says. 'In the 1980s we had destruction, many jobs were lost, but eventually they were replaced with ones in call centres. 'This time around, my instinct says that the process will go faster than previously. Moving from manufacturing to services is a bigger leap than services to services, it's a clearer transition,' he continues. 'It will probably take years rather than decades, but that is just a guess.' It seems that I am far from alone in being affected by the ongoing purge of middle-aged workers. Indeed, you only have to look at LinkedIn to see vast numbers of people posting about their increasingly difficult search for work. 'Broke and broken' Joe Emery, 43, is a copy writer and has previously worked for Virgin Media O2 and City funds group M&G Investments. He was made redundant three years ago and, since then, he has only been able to pick up two nine-month temporary contracts, leaving him 'broke and broken'. 'It's been really, really hard,' he says. 'I ended up in psychiatric care, depressed and with suicidal thoughts. Only my family and friends have kept me going. It's been so stressful. I'm 43 and I have to rebuild my life, not from scratch but from multiple levels below zero.' Watching your finances dwindle and the despair it brings is also something Craig Webster, 51, knows all about. Until the end of last year, he was a senior recruitment professional at an IT company. He took voluntary redundancy and thought he would quickly find a new role. He did not. Seven months on and nearly 1,000 failed job applications later, Webster has finally returned to the workforce, but that time in between has left its scars. Being rejected from a staggering number of employers was bad, admits Webster, and affected his mental health. But having to tell his son about his changed financial circumstances was far worse. 'I had to tell my son in May that we might have to stop going to watch Spurs together as I wouldn't have the money,' he says. 'Going to football, that's our thing and telling him that was painful – it made me feel like I was less of a dad. 'I've taken a role that is two levels below where I was, on half the money' 'I have lost six months of my life, my self-worth, and I have to start again,' he continues. 'I've taken a role that is two levels below where I was, on half the money, and I have had to cut my cloth accordingly. I have had to go backwards to go forwards.' One of my neighbours, Jan*, was also fortunate in that it only took him three months to find a new job after being made redundant. However, that period of unemployment knocked him for six. 'I was dazed; it was incredible,' he says. 'I couldn't believe it. How could this be? I spent most of the day walking with the dogs.' When you lose your job, you initially think you will bounce back instantly. But as the weeks become months, you quickly realise that all the things you took for granted from your formerly stable, comfortable life, will soon be beyond you. My wife has a great career, but going from two decent incomes to just hers and my patchy, inconsistent freelance earnings means we're watching the purse strings. Our next holiday, for example, which was paid for and budgeted for last year, will be our last for a while. I never felt alone or down in the aftermath of being stabbed by Isis. I had my family and friends around me, and I had the security of knowing that not only would I recover, I would be back at work stronger and better than ever. Losing my job, my status in my chosen profession and my income is far worse. Nothing cuts quite as deep as looking at your son and knowing that you may not be able to provide the life he deserves. Fortunately, my story is set to end on a happy note. I wrote a post on LinkedIn about my own difficulties in this jobs market and it led to a flood of messages and phone calls from interested groups and, most importantly, job offers. The upshot is I have shaken hands on one offer and I cannot wait to get started. I am lucky, but there are too many talented, middle-aged and middle-class people out there wondering where their next pay cheque will come from, and what future their children will have. My four months of hell is nothing compared to what some of them have been through.


Daily Mirror
11 hours ago
- Daily Mirror
Brit in terror probe claimed he would 'make 9/11 look like episode of Teletubbies'
Curtis Ross had a fascination with 'Unabomber' Ted Kaczynski, a lone wolf terrorist who killed three Americans, and was arrested after causing an explosion with two gas canisters in Fife A man held in a terror probe claimed he would make the 9/11 attacks 'look like an episode of the Teletubbies'. Curtis Ross had a fascination with 'Unabomber' Ted Kaczynski – the lone wolf terrorist who killed three Americans and injured many others over nearly 20 years. Ross, 24, had been arrested after posting online a clip of himself blowing up two gas canisters near the River Leven in Methil, Fife. His home was raided and police found a drawing marked 'Project Payback'. A phone and tablet device were also examined which included the voice message about the 2001 Twin Towers atrocity and him discussing with others 'murdering all the people who wronged you'. Ross appeared in the dock last week at the High Court in Glasgow. He pled guilty to a charge of behaving in a threatening and abusive manner which included sending the concerning messages and voice notes on Snapchat and Facebook, causing an explosion, filming it and putting the footage on social media between June 25 and July 31 last year. He had a not guilty plea to a charge under the Terrorism Act accepted. Ross was remanded in custody and will be sentenced at a later date. A Facebook friend of Ross had spotted the explosion video in July last year. He showed it to a young woman who was so "alarmed" she contacted police. Ross was held that day after being spotted in Methil. Detectives – along with Counter Terrorism officers – searched his home in the town. They found the 'Project Payback' drawing along with a sketch of a 'homemade explosive device'. Inside a desk were various items including a roll of wire, mobile phone batteries, nails, screws and a watch. There were also initial fears about a package in the property which led to homes in the area being evacuated, but it did not contain an explosive. Prosecutor Greg Farrell said Ross "laughed" when first quizzed about what he had filmed claiming it was an "attempt at satire comedy". But, he confirmed that he had blew up two butane gas canisters and had posted it on his Facebook page under the name of a Batman comic villain. Mr Farrell: "He made reference to social media corrupting his decisions." Ross was asked about his interest in Kaczynski - captured in 1996 - and said he was "apparently some kind of mail bomber" that he had learned more about by going down a "rabbit hole" online. Ross went on to insist that he himself was "not a terrorist" as he had "made peace with everything in his life". Mr Farrell told the court of a Snapchat conversation with a friend. Ross stated at one stage: "I am going to make 9/11 look like an episode of the Teletubbies, f*** sake." He then backtracked again claiming it was "satire comedy" and that he was "only joking". The friend replied: "F*** Islam, f*** them all." During further rants, Ross said he had been let down by the "justice system" complaining he had been treated differently because he is a man. In messages to another contact, he said: "I have realised that I simply cannot allow what is happening to humanity and our world to continue. I can and will have an impact on preventing the worst from happening xx." The court heard there were also photos, videos and sketches of the "Unabomber" on the devices as well as images of a pipe bomb and firearms together with "various other clips which suggest violence". Lord Colbeck deferred sentencing for reports.