A former
supervisor at Primark who became a terrorist fighting for the world’s
most feared terrorist group has been killed in Syria.
Muhammad
Hamidur Rahman, 25, was one of an estimated 500 Britons who went to
Syria to fight for the Islamic State of Iraq and Sham (ISIS).
The
group has renamed itself Islamic State (IS), and now controls vast
swathes of Syria and Iraq, which it has declared as the world’s newest
Islamic caliphate.
This
weekend, the U.S. bombed key IS targets in northern Iraq as the group
threatened to wipe out a secretive sect known as the Yazidis, accusing
them of being devil worshippers.
Rahman,
from Portsmouth, was shot dead in a gun fight a fortnight ago, a day
before the Muslim festival if Eid, said his family.
His
father, Abdul Hannan, 52, an Indian restaurant worker, said the family
received a text message from a friend of Rahman in Syria who informed
them that their son was dead.
The
latest killing brings the death toll of British jihadists in Syria to
19, according to terrorism experts at the International Centre for the
Study of Radicalisation (ICSR) at King’s College, London, which monitors
the war in Syria.
Rahman is the second British jihadist from Portsmouth to die in Syria.
The first was his friend Iftekhar Jaman, 23, who died in December.
Rahman’s
father, Mr Hannan, said that Jaman went to Syria first at the beginning
of last year, and then took his son there by contacting him through
social media.
He
said that Rahman did not tell any member of his family that he was
going to Syria, but suddenly disappeared from Portsmouth. Days later,
they received a call from him saying he was in Syria.
Mr Hannan said: ‘He asked us to pray for him, and said he wanted to become a shaheed (martyr) for the sake of Allah.’
It is not known where in Syria Rahman died.
But Shiraz
Maher, a terrorism expert at the ICSR, said he spoke to Rahman on social
media a month ago, when he said he was in the northern Syria city of
Deir Zour, which is a stronghold for IS.
Maher said: ‘From speaking to him, I got the sense that he was a man who wanted to become a martyr. He was a man of conviction.’
Rahman was working at his local Primark store, but was dismissed a month before he went to Syria last October.
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