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‘I disown my sons, if they come back alive’: Father’s Fury Seeing His Sons In Chilling ISIS Recruitment Video

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The father of a star medical student who appeared in a chilling ISIS recruitment video and is in Syria with his younger brother says he disowns his two sons.

Ahmed Muthana, 57 from Cardiff says that if Nasser Muthana and 17-year-old Aseel ever return to the UK, he would love to see them go to jail.

His comments came as it was revealed his 20-year-old son, was a key figure in a chilling recruitment video aimed at luring jihadists to Iraq.

Muthana has been offered places to study medicine by four universities and was due to begin his course last September. Instead he secretly made his way to Syria from his family home in Cardiff with his 17-year-old brother.

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Recruiting: Nasser Muthana, centre, a medical student from Cardiff, in the video urging British Muslims to join ISIS militants in Iraq and Syria

Recruiting: Nasser Muthana, centre, a medical student from Cardiff, in the video urging British Muslims to join ISIS militants in Iraq and Syria

Nasser Muthana in his school uniformMessage: The 13-minute video is professionally shot and edited, and shows a group of young men sitting in a circle holding weapons, while reciting Islamist slogans and passages from the Qur'an

Nasser Muthana, left, pictured in his school uniform and right, in a recruitment video for the al-Qaeda inspired ISIS terror group

But their father, who said his sons had been ‘brainwashed’  after they began worshipping at different mosques and grew beards explained: ‘They don’t represent me now and I don’t want to see them again.

‘I would love to see them go to jail if they return to the UK alive, if they ever come back.’

Yesterday, to the horror of his relatives, Muthana bragged of fighting for the  Al Qaeda-inspired ISIS terror group. He appears alongside two other young British jihadists in the 13-minute long, professionally shot video, which was posted online yesterday.

Named in the video as ‘Abu Muthanna Al Yemeni’, he says: ‘We understand no borders. We have participated in battles in Sham [Syria] and in a few days we will go to Iraq and will fight them, and will even go to Lebanon and Jordan, wherever our Sheikh [ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi] wants to send us.’

In a direct message to al-Baghdadi, he adds: ‘Send us, we are your sharp arrows. Throw us at your enemies, wherever they may be.’

Encouragement: At several points the man identifying himself as Abu Bara' Al Hindi claims joining ISIS will alleviate the stress and 'depression' of living in the West

Encouragement: At several points the man identifying himself as Abu Bara’ Al Hindi claims joining ISIS will alleviate the stress and ‘depression’ of living in the West.

Muthana is a former pupil of Cathays High School in Cardiff, where he received 13 GCSEs – with 12 at grade A or A*.

After completing his A-levels, the former school council member received four offers from universities to read medicine, but did not take up any. His family said he set off for Syria about eight months ago.

Muthana’s brother Aseel was studying for his A-levels, at the nearby Fitzalan High School, and had dreamed of becoming an English teacher.

Mr Muthana added: ‘I feel very sad. I don’t know how Nasser got out there. I found out that he had gone to Turkey because he phoned home and spoke to my youngest son.

‘He left in November. We didn’t hear anything else until now when we have seen the video.

Propaganda: Among those speaking in the video is a man identifying himself as Abu Muthana Al Yemeni (right) - who claims to have travelled to the Middle East from Britain

Propaganda: Among those speaking in the video is a man identifying himself as Abu Muthana Al Yemeni (right) – who claims to have travelled to the Middle East from Britain

Global: Another man making an appearance in the chilling video is Abu Yahya ash Shami (pictured) - who speaks with a strong Australian accent

Global: Another man making an appearance in the chilling video is Abu Yahya ash Shami (pictured) – who speaks with a strong Australian accent.

‘I thought he had got married out there and wasn’t coming back. There was very  little I could do anyway. I didn’t think he’d got involved in jihad.’

He added of Nasser: ‘He was very kind, very quiet and was into helping people. I thought he was quite Western in outlook. He would play football and rugby with his friends.’

One man in the video, named as Abu Bara Al Hindi, claims he too is from Britain, and describes jihad as ‘the cure for depression’.

Speaking in front of the extremist group’s black flag, he asks: ‘Are you willing to sacrifice the fat job you’ve got, the big car you’ve got, the family you have?

‘Are you willing to sacrifice this, for the sake of Allah? Definitely, if you sacrifice something for Allah, Allah will give you 700 times more than this.’ In the video entitled ‘There is no life without Jihad’ the men, who are joined by two Australians and other fighters, claim they are about to cross the border from Syria in to Iraq.

The third British jihadist, who calls himself Abu Dujana al Hindi, says: ‘A message to the brothers who have stayed behind.

‘You have to ask yourself what prevents you from joining the ranks of the mujahideen? What prevents you from obtaining martyrdom? You are going to die anyway.’

The video, which is interspersed with music and religious chanting, forms part of ISIS’s global propaganda campaign, urging Muslims to post messages of support on Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and Instagram. It follows the publication of its ‘company accounts’ logging assassinations, suicide missions and bombings.

David Cameron has warned that Britain cannot afford to ignore the chaos in Iraq and Syria because of the risk that British jihadis will bring their murderous tactics back to the UK.

He described the estimated 400 British fighters in the region as ‘the most serious threat to Britain’s security that there is today’.

A Home Office spokesman said yesterday: ‘We do not tolerate the existence of online terrorist and extremist propaganda, which directly influences people who are vulnerable to radicalisation.

‘We already work closely with the internet industry to remove terrorist material hosted in the UK or overseas. We also continue to work with charities and community groups to help them challenge those who use the internet to promote extremist ideologies.’

Since February 2010 the Counter Terrorism Internet Referral Unit, run by the Metropolitan Police, says it has taken down over 34,000 unlawful terrorist-related online material which encourages or glorifies acts of terrorism.

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