Thursday, 25 September 2014

Sierra Leone teenager who joined ISIS killed by US airstrike


A 19 year old pupil who quit his studies to wage jihad in Syria has been killed by the US air strikes. Ibrahim Kamara originally from Sierra Leone, had recently completed a resit of his GCSEs at Varndean College in Brighton. He secretly travelled to the war torn country.  Fellow jihadists posted messages online about Kamara’s death.  One claimed Kamara was struck by an American drone in Aleppo while he was sleeping.

His 35 year old mum, Mrs Kamara said she knew her son was likely to die when he rang her and confessed he was in Syria:

“He called me in February. He said: “Mum, I’m in Syria”, and I hung up. He rang again and I said: “Don’t ever call me.” The first we heard about his death was when my younger son got a Facebook message from one of the boys he went out there with.
He sent a photo of Ibrahim dead and the message read “Congratulations, your brother has become a martyr”. My son told him to delete the picture but he refused.
He was a normal respectful boy. He had friends at school. He was studying IT and wanted to become an engineer. He moved out recently but he had the spare key to my house and came round for dinner all the time. I had no idea what he was planning. He must have been brainwashed. He went out there with three brothers from Brighton.
His passport was expired so he went up into my room and got the passport of his 15-year-old brother. It makes me wonder about the Border Control people because they look nothing like each other.’ The Foreign Office said it was aware of the reports of the dead Britons but could not confirm them at this stage.”
Kamara was a member of Jabhat al-Nusra, an Al Qaeda affiliate which has fought with, and sometimes against, Islamic State. The group has also fought against the forces of Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in the country’s civil war.


His single mother and her three other sons, who live in the Sussex city, are believed to be refugees from Sierra Leone who came to Britain via the Netherlands.


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