2.44 PM Tuesday, 16 April 2024
  • City Fajr Shuruq Duhr Asr Magrib Isha
  • Dubai 04:36 05:52 12:21 15:49 18:45 20:02
16 April 2024

'White Jihadi' likely to be dead in Daesh suicide bomb attack

Daesh militant is Abdur Raheem, formerly known as Jake who was a high-achieving 18-year-old student. (Twitter: @Raqq_Sl)

Published
By AP

Australia's government said Thursday it was trying to confirm reports that an Australian teenager was among a group of suicide bombers from the Daesh movement that struck Iraq's embattled Anbar province.

The Daesh group claimed in an online statement that it used foreign fighters from Australia, Belgium, Syria and Uzbekistan in Wednesday's attack, in which at least 13 suicide car bombs exploded almost simultaneously in Ramadi, the provincial capital of Anbar, killing two soldiers and wounding eight.

One photo that was posted featured a white van driving down a dusty street, alongside an image of a young man who closely resembles 18-year-old Australian Jake Bilardi sitting behind the wheel.

"I can confirm that we're seeking to independently verify that he was part of this suicide bombing attack," Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop said. "The news appears very grim, but we are seeking to independently verify it."

The British press labeled Bilardi the "White Jihadi" in December after images of him armed with a rifle in front of militant flags appeared on social media sites.

The teen left his home in the southern Australian city of Melbourne in August and headed to the Middle East. Bishop said he had been on Australia's radar for several months, and in October, she canceled his passport on the advice of the country's security agencies.

Last year, the Australian government passed sweeping counterterrorism legislation that made it easier for officials to cancel the passports of people they suspect of engaging in extremism. The law also makes it a crime for Australians to visit certain terrorism hot spots overseas.

"If these reports are confirmed, this is another tragic example of a young Australian being lured to a senseless and violent death by a brutal terrorist organization that is intent on imposing suffering and misery not only in Iraq and in Syria, but beyond," Bishop said.

Bishop would not comment on an unsourced report by the Australian Broadcasting Corp. that said Bilardi had left a series of homemade bombs in his Melbourne home before leaving for the Middle East. The ABC reported that Bilardi's family found the devices after he left and alerted authorities, who then began tracking his movements overseas.

"Until such time as I've been briefed by our security and law enforcement agencies, I won't go into those reports," Bishop said.

Police also declined to comment.

At least 90 Australians are currently fighting with and supporting terrorist groups in Iraq and Syria, and more than 20 have already been killed, Bishop said.

More than 30 foreign fighters have returned to Australia and at least 140 people in Australia are actively supporting extremist groups, according to the government. Around 100 Australians suspected of being extremists have had their passports canceled to prevent them joining the fight in Iraq and Syria or from returning home.

Two Australia-born brothers aged 16 and 17 were stopped at Sydney Airport last week on suspicion that they were headed to the Middle East to join Daesh fighters.