In a bid to boost morale in their dwindling territories in
Syria and Iraq, the Islamic State (Isis) has released new images of its oldest
jihadist. The 81-year-old Chinese extremist is said to be a minority Muslim
Uighur hailing from Xinjiang, an autonomous territory in north west China
formerly known as Turkestan.
The region has long-been a flash point for battles between
the marginalised Uighurs and the Chinese state. Muhammed Amin, who said he was
an imam in his home town, believes Muslims face oppression in China.
He says that he decided to leave his family behind and join
Isis after seeing a video of his militant son being killed in Syria. Now he is
being snapped holding guns in an attempt to boost the morale of Isis fighters
struggling to hold onto the besieged Iraqi city of Fallujah which is under
pressure from the Iraqi army and Western airstrikes.
Grasping an AK-47 rifle, he said he had been trained by
Isis. He added: "I came to Islamic State and went to training camp despite
my old age. I went to training camp and I crawled, I ran and I rolled. I did
almost everything and ended training camp well. After receiving a weapon I
asked permission to participate in battle, but he didn't give me permission so I
am presently in ribat (base)."
Iraqi forces have been closing in on Fallujah to reclaim the
city from Isis militants in what is turning into a particularly brutal battle.
Fallujah is important as it was the first city in Iraq to fall under Isis
control in January 2014 and has been under siege for more than six months.
Last year Chinese officials claimed that Muslims from
Xinjiang were travelling to the terrorists' self-declared caliphate to join
Isis and then returning home to plot attacks against China. In 2014 Bejing
sentenced three Muslim Uighurs to death for their involvement in a suicide
attack in Beijing's Tiananmen Square.
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