Thursday, October 2, 2014

Two of ISIS’s most bloodthirsty savages, who were pictured holding severed heads in Syria, were caught on film rioting in Australia two years ago, according to a new report.

ISIS savages seen on film rioting in Australia in 2012

Two of ISIS’s most bloodthirsty savages, who were pictured holding severed heads in Syria, were caught on film rioting in Australia two years ago, according to a new report.
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Khaled SharroufPhoto: News Corp Australia
Khaled Sharrouf and Mohamed Elomar, who fled their native Australia to wage jihad in the Middle East, are seen at the September 2012 riots that took place in Sydney’s Hyde Park, according to the Daily Telegraph.
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Mohamed ElomarPhoto: Twitter
The two terrorists are pictured standing right next to one another, while a police officer urges the crowd to protest peacefully.
The demonstrations — staged against an anti-Islamic film that was released on YouTube — turned violent, and six police officers and 19 protesters were injured in the ensuing riots.
About 15 months after the violent protests, the deadly duo fled Australia to start their jihadist careers, the paper said.
Sharrouf needed to use his brother’s passport to leave the country because his own had been confiscated by authorities.
The terror team joined ISIS at the group’s home base in Syria’s Al-Raqqa. They have been rampaging across the country in a white BMW collecting taxes from Christians and other minorities on behalf of the Islamic State, the Daily Telegraph said.
Counterterrorism experts in Australia said the newly released photos reveal a previously unknown link between ISIS and radical Muslims in the country.
“With hindsight, there may have been some direct links to ISIS that we didn’t know about at the time,” terror expert Greg Barton told the paper.
Both of the ISIS savages have a criminal history in Australia.
They documented their twisted terror spree on social media while waging a bloody campaign in Syria and northern Iraq.
The two savages can be seen carrying the heads of beheading victims and mugging for the camera in images that were taken earlier this year.
In one of the most disturbing photos posted, Sharrouf shows his 7-year-old son holding a severed head with both hands.
“That’s my boy!” he wrote in the caption.
Sharrouf was arrested on terror charges in Australia. He bragged on social media about tricking doctors into believing he was mentally ill to obtain a shorter sentence.
He served less than four years in jail and was released in 2009.

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