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Purported photos of 'Chinese Islamic State fighter' emerge online

Lotto

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset

Purported photos of 'Chinese Islamic State fighter' emerge online

PUBLISHED : Wednesday, 03 September, 2014, 1:29pm
UPDATED : Wednesday, 03 September, 2014, 5:34pm

Chris Luo [email protected]

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The captured militant is seen guarded by an Iraqi soldier. Photos: Iraqi Ministry of Defence

Photos of a purported Chinese man fighting for the powerful Islamic militant group, the Islamic State, have raised eyebrows in both Iraq and China since surfacing online Tuesday. If proven authentic, they could make the man the first confirmed Chinese national to be found fighting for the extremist Sunni militant group, also known as ISIS.

A Facebook page identified as operated by the Iraqi Ministry of Defence published two photos of an apparently captured fighter yesterday.

In a short message along with the posting it described the man as “Chinese daash” - daash being an acronym for “The Islamic State in Iraq and Syria”, or ISIS.

In one photo the captured militant is seen being guarded by an Iraqi soldier. Another photo shows him lying unconscious on the ground.

In both photos the militant seemed to have endured severe beatings to his face, and it is hard to identify his ethnicity based on facial features.

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The militant is seen laying unconscious on the ground in this photo released by the Iraqi Ministry of Defence.

The Chinese embassy in Iraq declined to comment on the photos when contacted on Wednesday. The Iraqi government and Chinese foreign ministry have not responded to interview requests from the South China Morning Post.

If proven authentic, the photos would be the first evidence that Chinese nationals have joined the extremist Sunni militants, along with scores of foreigners, including at least several hundred from Britain, Australia and the United States.

Last year a video emerged on YouTube that showed a Chinese man, calling himself “Bo Wang”, who said he had joined Islamist militants to fight in Syria.

Islamic State leader Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi in a July speech stated that “Muslim rights are forcibly seized in China, India, Palestine”, and urged all Muslims around the world to join his cause.

Wu Sike, China’s special envoy to the Middle East, has previously stated than an estimated 100 Chinese citizens may be fighting for the Islamic State. They are mostly Muslim Uyghurs from China’s remote western region of Xinjiang, according to Wu.

Yin Gang, a West Asian and African Studies scholar at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, estimated that hundreds of Chinese nationals have been fighting for the Islamic State.

“‘All Muslims under heaven are one family’. These Chinese nationals are responding to the extreme Muslims’ call to join the jihad of ISIS and are seeking to gather combat experience,” Yin said.

He said these fighters previously sought to join al-Qaeda in Afghanistan but as the nation became politically more stable, they are now entering Iraq and Syria to join the Islamic State, because the region is “the paradise of jihadists”.


 

Force 136

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
There would be peace in China if more of these rubbish leave China to fight in the Middle East.....
 

DefJam

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset


Four suspected Chinese ISIS members arrested in Indonesia

Staff Reporter
2014-09-16

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A Kurdish fighter from the Freedom Party of Kurdistan holds a position in Dibis, Iraq. (Photo/CFP)

Four Chinese nationals of Uyghur ethnicity have been arrested by Indonesian police on suspicion of being members of Islamic State, also known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) or the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), the brutal jihadist group that claims religious authority over all Muslims across the world.

Indonesian authorities say they have confirmed that the suspects, captured by anti-terrorism forces on the island of Sulawesi on Monday, are from northwestern China's restive Xinjiang Uyghur autonomous region. The suspects are believed to have traveled to Indonesia from China via Cambodia, Thailand and Malaysia, with the intent of connecting with a local Islamic State chief.

The arrests came just a day after Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said his country should remain vigilant and avoid thinking of Islamic State as merely a distant threat, and urged measures to stop citizens from heading to the Middle East to join the extremist group.

This may not be the first time a Chinese national has been captured by authorities for joining Islamic State. Earlier this month, two photos posted on a Facebook page purportedly operated by the Iraqi Ministry of Defence showed a badly beaten man apparently captured by the Iraqi Army, along with a short message describing the man as a Chinese member of Islamic State.

China's special envoy to the Middle East, Wu Sike, has also stated that Islamic State may have already recruited as many as 100 Chinese citizens, most of whom are Uyghurs from Xinjiang. The Chinese government has blamed the Muslim Uyghurs for a slew of terrorist attacks across the country in recent years, including several deadly assaults on police stations, bombings at public markets, knife attacks at train stations, and a mass riot in late July that reportedly led to 100 deaths and over 200 arrests. Uyghur activists accuse Beijing of suppressing their religious and cultural freedoms.

Despite being unwilling to join the international military alliance led by the United States aimed at striking down Islamic State, China has been vocal in its opposition to the militant organization. On Aug. 15, Liu Jieyi, China's permanent representative to the United Nations, called upon the international community to strengthen efforts to combat Islamic State, calling the extremist group "a serious threat to peace and security in the Middle East and the world as a whole."

"China is also a victim of terrorism. We strongly oppose all forms of terrorism and will continue to actively participate in international counter-terrorism cooperation and to combat the threat of terrorism together," Liu added.

The New York Times reported, citing US intelligence officials, that there are around 15,000 foreign militants from 80 countries currently in Iraq and Syria, most of whom are fighting for Islamic State. Hong Kong newspaper Ta Kung Pao claims the majority of the foreign fighters are said to be from nearby Muslim countries such as Tunisia and Saudi Arabia, with others from further parts of the world such as Belgium, Russia and the United States, as well as China.

 
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