2014 SBF Father of the Year Nominee: Jihadist Khaled Sharrouf from Sydney

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Jihadist Khaled Sharrouf tweets photo of son holding soldier's severed head

'That's my boy' dad boasts of photo taken in northern Syrian city of Raqqa

The Associated Press Posted: Aug 10, 2014 10:40 PM ET Last Updated: Aug 11, 2014 2:56 AM ET

khaled-sharrouf.jpg

Sharrouf also posted photos of himself and young armed boys believed to be his sons in front of the ISIS flag. (The Australian/Twitter)

An Australian newspaper on Monday published a photograph of a child it said was the son of an Australian convicted terrorist holding aloft the severed head of a Syrian soldier.

Prime Minister Tony Abbott told Australian Broadcasting Corp. radio that the photograph was further evidence of "just how barbaric" the Islamic State group is.

The Australian newspaper reported that the photograph of terrorist Khaled Sharrouf's son, who was raised in Sydney, was posted on Twitter by his proud father.

"That's my boy!" Sharrouf apparently posted beneath the image that was taken in the northern Syrian city of Raqqa, the capital of what has been declared that an Islamic Caliphate by the Islamic State, the newspaper reported.

The child, who is not named, appears to be younger than 10 years old.

Sharrouf used his brother's passport to leave Australia last year with his wife and three sons to fight in Syria and Iraq. The Australian government had banned him from leaving the country because of the terrorism threat he posed.

He was among nine Muslim men accused in 2007 of stockpiling bomb-making materials and plotting terrorist attacks in Australia's largest cities, Sydney and Melbourne.

He pleaded guilty to terrorism offences and was sentenced in 2009 to four years in prison.

Australian police announced last month that they had arrest warrants for Sharrouf and his companion Mohamed Elomar, another former Sydney resident, for "terrorism-related activity."

They will be arrested if they return to Australia.

Posing with massacred bodies

The warrants followed photographs being posted on Sharrouf's Twitter account showing Elomar smiling and holding the severed heads of two Syrian soldiers.

In June, The Australian newspaper published a photograph of Sharrouf posing among the bodies of massacred Iraqis.

Abbott, who on Monday was in the Netherlands, said he expected Australian C-130 Hercules and C-17 Globemaster military transport planes would join multinational humanitarian efforts this week on Iraq's Sinjar Mountain.

British officials estimated Saturday that 50,000 to 150,000 people could be trapped on the mountain, where they fled to escape the Islamic extremists, only to become stranded there with few supplies.

"Australia will gladly join the humanitarian airlifts to the people stranded on Mount Sinjar," Abbott told ABC. "This is a potential humanitarian catastrophe."

He said Islam State's quest for a terrorist nation posed "extraordinary problems" for the Middle East and the wider world.

"We see more and more evidence of just how barbaric this particular entity is," Abbott said.


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Australia used to be a great country until immigration fucked it up


Terrorist Khaled Sharrouf went to jihad on welfare
<cite style="box-sizing: border-box; padding-right: 8px; display: inline-block; font-style: normal;">THE AUSTRALIAN</cite>

JULY 12, 2014 12:00AM



ONE of Australia’s most-wanted terrorists and a suspected war criminal, Khaled Sharrouf continued to receive a taxpayer-funded disability pension months after arriving on the battlefields of Syria.

The Weekend Australian understands Sharrouf, who fled Australia for Syria using his brother’s passport, continued to receive his disability support pension at least until February, about two months after he left Australia bound for Syria.

Sharrouf, who was convicted as part of the 2005 Pendennis terror trial, arrived in Syria in December and has distinguished himself as one of the most brutal *Australian fighters to emerge on the Syrian battlefield.

Revelations that the former Sydney man was paid his regular fortnightly disability cheque — $766 a fortnight — long after authorities knew he was gone, raise the possibility that the taxpayer may have been inadvertently funding his activities.

It is not clear if Sharrouf *accessed the money, but his journey to Syria took him through *Indonesia, Malaysia and Turkey — countries where he would have had ready access to any money paid into his bank account.

There is also the possibility the cash could have been accessed on his behalf and sent to him via informal channels, such as the *hawala networks.

Sharrouf served three years and nine months for his role in the Pendennis plot, a terrorist conspiracy in which 18 men were convicted over plans to attack targets in NSW and Victoria.

The 33-year-old’s trial was complicated by his schizophrenia, which was *described by a psychiatrist at his trial as “fairly disabling’’ and resulted in psychotic episodes when not controlled by anti-psychotic drugs.

Sharrouf left Australia from Sydney on December 6 and authorities learned of his fraud by *December 18 at the latest.

Human Services Minister Marise Payne declined yesterday to discuss the Sharrouf case, citing privacy concerns.

Under normal circumstances a disability support pension can be cancelled if the recipient is overseas for six weeks.

Ms Payne said the law as it stood did not allow authorities to cancel the payments of Australians suspected of involvement in criminal or extremist behaviour.

“(But) recent events have highlighted the need for further measures to ensure Australians engaged in terrorist activities are not receiving payments,’’ she told The Weekend Australian.

Sharrouf’s case was complicated by the fact that he left on his brother’s passport, suggesting there was a delay before police *notified the Department of Human Services, a possibility alluded to by Ms Payne: “In relation to those who leave the country unlawfully, the government relies on advice from the relevant security and law enforcement agencies in relation to residency questions and cannot act until such advice is received.’’

Sharrouf’s departure proved a major embarrassment for border security authorities and triggered two separate reviews.

Those reviews, neither of which has been made public, resulted in a new directive requiring border control staff to give greater emphasis to enforcing and checking suspicious travel, even if it meant slowing movement through the airport.

Sharrouf’s brother was subject to an alert, which was triggered after Sharrouf passed through passport control. But, the alert did not require Customs to detain him, merely to flag his departure.

Immigration Minister Scott Morrison said yesterday a consequence of the Sharrouf episode would be to ensure frontline border control officers had greater access to “actionable’’ intelligence provided by other agencies, such as the Australian Federal Police or ASIO.

“Where the sharing of that intelligence might otherwise in the past have been constrained, what we’re doing now is facilitating a higher level connection with our agency,’’ Mr Morrison told The Weekend Australian.

“That will enable a narrative to be passed down the line that doesn’t compromise any of that, but ensures our alerts are giving our officers a much better opportunity to act.’’

News that Sharrouf continued to receive his pension months after leaving Australia came as he and his brother-in-arms, fellow Australian Mohamed Elomar, launched an online diatribe against the country they have left.

Sharrouf, who has documented his participation in gruesome executions of unarmed Iraqis and his life in Syria, described Australian soldiers as “dogs” and said Australia’s population descended from the Ku Klux Klan.

Elomar, who met Sharrouf in Malaysia before travelling to Syria with him, did the same, jousting with other Twitter users.

Since their Twitter handles became public, both Sharrouf and Elomar have been attacked for fighting in Syria.

Yesterday, Elomar hit back, threatening to “slaughter’’ other users.

“We will slaughter you all just like we slaughter birds u dirty infidel dogs,’’ he said in response to the provocations of another user.

The series of inarticulate and offensive online posts were in response to criticism of Sharrouf made by several Australian Twitter users.
“Those dogs who u call diggers died fighting for alcohol and prostitutes how noble,” Sharrouf said on Wednesday night.

“Thank Allah I left the land of cowards & imbreds puppets with strings being pulled by USA like bitches ...

He continued on with his description of Australia as being filled with racists.

“If it wasn’t for research you wouldn’t have left an aborigne (sic) in aus (sic) … you are filth scum of the earth convict pig scum!

“You have no right to talk about us cause you’re all convict you hill billy red neck scum.’’

“Cronulla riots is your peak bunch of fags.”
Sharrouf also continued his online attack against a fellow Australian in Syria, Sheik Abu Sulayman, who is a spiritual leader of al-Qa’ida’s Jabbhat al-Nusra group, a bitter rival of Islamic State, the group Sharrouf and Elomar have sworn allegiance to.

Sharrouf accused Sulayman of being an “ASIO informant liar” before he left Sydney to join the jihad.

Sulayman didn’t respond *directly but thanked another Twitter user for defending him.

Sharrouf has been diagnosed with schizophrenia after “sustained use of amphetamines, LSD and ecstasy” as a teenager led to him experiencing “voices, hallucinations and delusions”, a court heard during his terrorism trial.

Additional reporting: Mark Schliebs
 
Europe, UK, Australia and US based on humanitarian ground allow
shitty migrant into their country and look now what happened they
are committing criminal act, protest in their host country and even dare the polis
to arrest them!! Must follow their fucking Sh&**&^h law!!
 
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