ISIS:WHY WOULD A BRITON BECOME A SUICIDE BOMBER?
Meet the family of a suicide bomber
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- British-born Abdul Waheed Majeed carried out a suicide bomb attack on Aleppo prison
- His mother misses him and his elder brother says "his intentions were bona fide"
- The soon-to-be bomber had sent his family pictures of him hard at work in tent camps
- According to his brother, Majeed never made a farewell phone call to his family
Three decades later -- in
February -- Majeed's story hit the media again. The headline this time:
"Video of British suicide bomber released."
The reports came just
after al Qaeda-linked jihadis in Syria posted an online video showing a
suicide attack on the notorious Aleppo prison. President Bashar
al-Assad's brutal regime was reportedly torturing hundreds of prisoners
there. The recording showed Majeed, who made his living in Britain
driving a highway maintenance truck, crashing into the prison gates at
the wheel of a Mad Max-style dump truck. Thick steel plates had been
welded to the cab of the vehicle for protection against enemy gunfire.
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"I miss my son so much.
He was a good boy," his mother Maqbool Majeed whispered to me during our
conversation at her home in Crawley, about an hour's drive from central
London. She said she came with her husband from Pakistan to Britain
almost 60 years ago. Her two sons and a daughter were born and raised in
England. Photos from the family album show the Majeed children had what
appeared to be a fairly normal British childhood. When Majeed reached
adulthood he married and is survived by his wife and three teenage
children.
Majeed's elder brother
Hafeez has rarely spoken publicly since the suicide bombing. But he made
clear that's not out of shame. "We feel no shame whatsoever," he said.
"Whatever [my brother Abdul] Waheed did, his intentions were bona fide
and true to the heart. His whole purpose was to save people in that
prison who had been tortured and raped."
In the video depicting
his final moments, Majeed appears calm as camouflage-clad Chechen
jihadis wrap their arms around his shoulders. Syrian rebel sources say
that unit had recently defected from ISIS to the al Qaeda-affiliated al
Nusra Front. His childhood friend Raheed Mahmood, who traveled to Syria
with him, said Majeed appeared composed.
"He was obviously at
peace," Mahmood told me. "The idea wasn't troubling him in any way. I
can only put that down to faith and the idea he knew where he was
going."
An electrician and
plumber by trade, Mahmood returned to Crawley about a month before
Majeed blew himself to smithereens in that attack at the start of
February. Mahmood and Majeed volunteered as drivers on an aid convoy
operated by a group of British-based Muslim charities in late July 2013.
A handful of Muslim NGOs are currently being investigated by UK
authorities on suspicion they may have been funnelling British fighters
to extremist groups in Syria or may have violated fund-raising rules by
donating cash to radical groups.
"There was lot of talk of
convoys going down there and taking aid, "Mahmood said. "Abdul Waheed
just raised the issue and asked me how I felt, so I turned round and
said let's do it." Once in northern Syria, not far from the Turkish
border, the pair volunteered to stay on, helping civilians in refugee
camps. Majeed's truck driving skills were in high demand. He also knew
how to operate diggers and helped build new camps and lay drainage
pipes.
Mahmood described the
myriad Syrian rebel groups as a "people's resistance force" and said
most people in the refugee camps had relatives fighting against the
Assad regime. They frequently saw gun-trucks and heavily armed rebels
driving through. They regularly saw fighters from all the factions,
including ISIS and al Nusra, in the camps, sometimes bringing supplies
to stranded civilians.
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"ISIS would come and
help as would the other groups," he said. "You'd hear about people
swapping from group to group unsure of whom to fight with. Young people
would be promoting their group. It didn't really seem to matter too much
whom you were fighting for."
But Mahmood said he had
no idea his friend Majeed had been recruited. The soon-to-be bomber had
sent his family plenty of pictures showing him hard at work in tent
camps. Many of the snaps showed him surrounded by children. In one, he
was even wearing flashing "Minnie Mouse" ears in an apparent effort to
brighten up daily life for youngsters around him.
According to his
brother, Majeed never made a farewell phone call to his family. The last
time he phoned in January, his family assumed it was just a routine
weekly catch-up. "In retrospect I should perhaps have paid more
attention to that phone conversation," his brother Hafeez told me. "He
said he loved us all very much. He said I know you're looking after the
family and if I've done any wrongs I hope you can forgive me."
He never phoned again.
Behind him in the small
family garden, filled with summer flowers, his mother shed silent tears.
"I don't know what happened. I just don't know. Only God knows," she
said. Neither family nor friends say they had any inkling Majeed was
planning to blow himself up. There were contradictory reports about how
successful the attack was. Some accounts suggested more than 300
prisoners had been freed. Other reports claimed Majeed detonated the
truck short of its intended target.
His brother, though, describes the infamous Assad-regime prison as a "legitimate military target."
"If he had been a
British soldier and carried out that brave act of heroism, he would have
been awarded the posthumous Victoria Cross," he said, referring to the
British military's highest honor for valor.
"If he had been a British soldier and carried out that brave act of
heroism, he would have been awarded the posthumous Victoria Cross"
Hafeez, Majeed's elder brother
Hafeez, Majeed's elder brother
Unsurprisingly, the
British government did not agree. UK intelligence services estimate that
more than 500 British nationals may be fighting with ISIS or other
jihadi groups in Syria or Iraq. And British Prime Minister David Cameron
has announced new measures to crack down on Islamic extremism and block
Britons returning from conflict zones in the Middle East.
"Our family didn't have
time to grieve. As soon as we took a breath the police were knocking on
our door to carry out searches under the Prevention of Terrorism Act,"
Hafeez Majeed said. Since his death, police and media investigations
have revealed Majeed's alleged links to radical Islamists in Britain.
In an interview with a
London newspaper, Syrian-born imam Omar Bakri Mohammad claimed Majeed
had been his driver on an unspecified number of visits to Crawley
between 1996 and 2004. The UK government excluded Bakri from Britain in
2005, accusing him of being a hate preacher. The same newspaper report
alleged Majeed had been friends with two Muslim men -- also from Crawley
-- convicted in 2007 of plotting to bomb a London nightclub. Hafeez
Majeed explained his brother had chauffeured Bakri on a "few" occasions
but did not share his radical interpretation of Islam. "He wasn't as,
press speculation says, a jihadist, a man born to fight. He had no
instances of violence at all in the UK. He was not a threat to the
British public," Hafeez Majeed said.
Majeed does not fit the
profile, being promoted by the government, of a Muslim misfit living a
deprived existence, easy prey for radical Islamist preachers or online
recruiters. His brother says it was perhaps the sight of civilians
suffering in the war in Syria or horror stories of the Assad regime's
action that may have pushed Majeed to become a suicide bomber.
But he's sure that, if
he had realized in time, he would have tried to halt his brother's
mission. "If I had known I would have told him please don't do it,"
Hafeez Majeed said. "Please, please, please. You're much better off
being alive so you can help all those people."CNN.