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Family of killed Isis fighter arrested in investigation into British jihadists

 

Paul Peachey,Kim Sengupta
Wednesday 15 October 2014 08:40 BST
Ifthekar Jaman's image featured on propaganda spread over social media by Britons fighting in Syria
Ifthekar Jaman's image featured on propaganda spread over social media by Britons fighting in Syria (Channel 4 News)

Relatives of a Briton killed in Syria while fighting for Isis have been arrested by counter-terrorist police investigating the sending of jihadist volunteers abroad.

The parents and two brothers of Ifthekar Jaman – who was killed in December last year – were held along with two other women during raids at four different addresses in Hampshire and London.

The arrests were thought to be linked to an inquiry into helping send young men to Syria – alongside women to become their brides. Police said the operation was linked to young people travelling to fight, rather than those who posed a threat in Britain.

Police raided Mr Jaman’s family home in Southsea, Portsmouth. His brothers – Mustakim, 23, and Tuhin, 26 – have previously spoken approvingly about Ifthekar’s role in Syria. “The way that he died was such a noble way,” said Mustakim in a television interview in February. “You couldn’t ask for a better way to leave this earth.”

Mustakim Jaman during an interview on Newsnight last year (BBC/Newsnight)

The home had previously been raided by the police in April. Mustakim went on Twitter then to say that his phones had been taken.

His dead brother’s image featured on propaganda spread over social media by Britons fighting in Syria. Before he died, he had encouraged young British Muslims to fight the Assad regime. He also appeared on Newsnight.

Mr Jaman’s parents, Enu Miah, 57, and Hena Choudhury, 48 are also thought to have been arrested as part of the operation.

Mr Miah was held on suspicion of engaging in conduct in preparation of terrorist acts and arranging availability of money and property for use in terrorism. His wife was held on suspicion of failing to disclose information about acts of terrorism. The brothers and two women, aged 23 and 29, were being held on suspicion of the commission, preparation and instigation of acts of terrorism.

The arrests came as police continue to interview six men over a separate potential domestic attack following raids in London. Officers said they had disrupted what was believed to be the early stages of a “significant plot”.

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