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British IS bomber was ex-Guantanamo Bay detainee: report
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) Feb 22, 2017


Dutch court jails would-be jihadist for 31 months
The Hague (AFP) Feb 22, 2017 - A 23-year-old man was Wednesday sentenced to 31 months in jail by a Dutch court after he twice tried to join jihadist groups to fight alongside them in Syria.

The man, who was not named, had been caught once in 2014 and then again in 2015 trying to slip across the border from Turkey into Syria.

The court in The Hague imposed a sentence of 31 months with 12 months suspended for attempting to join a terror organisation involved in murder, manslaughter and arson.

The sentence was meant "to send a signal to deter others who may have similar plans," the court said in its judgement.

The Netherlands has warned it would crackdown on nationals seeking to join groups such as the so-called Islamic State.

At least 280 Dutch citizens, a third of them women, have left The Netherlands to join the Islamic State (IS) and other groups in Syria and Iraq.

About 45 have been killed and another 45 have recently returned, leaving 190 believed to be still on the ground.

Dutch prosecutors announced last week they have now opened investigations into the 190 nationals still fighting alongside jihadist groups in Iraq and Syria, with the first trial set to open next month.

"These people believe that they have said 'goodbye' to our judicial system. But we have not said 'goodbye' to them," said Ferry van Veghel, a spokesman for the prosecution service.

A suicide bomber from the Islamic State group was a British citizen detained at Guantanamo Bay, a family member told The Times newspaper on Wednesday.

The British fighter who IS claimed detonated a suicide bomb against Iraqi forces outside Mosul was named in British media as Jamal al-Harith, who was detained at the United States base between 2002 and 2004.

An image released by IS and published on Monday by the SITE Intelligence Group was confirmed as al-Harith by his brother Leon Jameson.

"It is him, I can tell by his smile. If it is true then I've lost a brother, so another family (member) gone," Jameson told The Times.

Channel 4 News cited an unnamed family member and another anonymous source as confirming Harith was pictured.

The photograph shows him smiling, dressed in camouflage clothing and appearing to be sat in a vehicle with wires and switches in the background.

The British government said it could not verify the reports.

"The UK has advised for some time against all travel to Syria, and against all travel to large parts of Iraq.

"As all UK consular services are suspended in Syria and greatly limited in Iraq, it is extremely difficult to confirm the whereabouts and status of British nationals in these areas," a spokeswoman told AFP.

Harith, a Muslim convert of Jamaican origin who was born Ronald Fiddler, was jailed in Afghanistan by the ruling Taliban because he held a British passport.

After the regime was toppled he was arrested by US troops in early 2002 and sent to Guantanamo, where he alleged he experienced beatings and degrading treatment.

On returning to Britain in 2004 he was briefly questioned by police and released without charge.

Harith travelled to Turkey and crossed into Syria in April 2014, the BBC reported citing Islamic State registration papers.

The following year his wife, Shukee Begum, travelled to Syria along with her five children in what she said was an effort to convince her husband to abandon IS.

After being reunited with Harith she was not allowed to leave IS territory and was smuggled out, she told Channel 4.


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TERROR WARS
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Western governments need to step up their efforts to combat corruption if they are to defeat jihadists such as the Islamic State group and Boko Haram, Transparency International warned Tuesday. Corrupt practices in states such as Nigeria, Libya and Iraq are providing fertile ground for extremists, the organisation's British branch said in a report. "Corruption is the most powerful weapon ... read more


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