India Among jihad Targets of ISIS
Ibrahim Awwad al-Badri, commander of the insurgent group Islamic State of Iraq
and al-Shams (ISIS), has vowed war against several countries, including
India, in a Ramzan speech released online late on Tuesday.
The
reference to India, the first in an ISIS manifesto, raises new concerns
for the safety of the almost hundred of its nations trapped in Iraqi
cities controlled by the Islamist group, which is battling the
governments of Iraq and Syria.
The Ramzan speech by
Mr al-Badri — also known by the pseudonym Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi — calls
on believers to take up arms during the month of penitence, and “terrify
the enemies of Allah and seek death in the places where you expect to
find it, for the dunya (worldly life) will come to an end”.
“Muslims’
rights”, Mr. al-Badri states in his speech, “are forcibly seized in
China, India, Palestine, Somalia, the Arabian Peninsula, the Caucasus,
Sham (the Levant), Egypt, Iraq, Indonesia, Afghanistan, the Philippines,
Ahvaz, Iran (by the rafidah (shia)), Pakistan, Tunisia, Libya, Algeria
and Morocco, in the East and in the West” [all text as in original
released by ISIS].
“Prisoners are moaning and crying
for help”, Mr. al-Badri continues. “Orphans and widows are complaining
of their plight. Women who have lost their children are weeping. Masajid (plural of masjid) are desecrated and sanctities are violated”.
Thus, he says, “the ummah of Islam is watching your jihad with eyes of hope, and indeed you have brothers in many parts of the world being inflicted with the worst kinds of torture”.
Mr.
al-Badri’s speech, released online in English, Russian, French,
Albanian and Russian, apart from Arabic, appeared part of a campaign to
reach out to violent Islamists worldwide.
Earlier
this week, ISIS had declared Mr. Badri the amir al-mumineen, or
commander of the faithful, and declared him the leader of the Islamic
caliphate it seeks to create.