Monday, August 11, 2014

Australia outraged image with its head cut off

Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott has condemned the publication in the newspaper Australian photograph on which the child holds the severed head of the military government of the Syrian army.
Australia outraged image with its head cut off
Tony Abbott
It is believed that the child in the photo - the son of an Australian, previously convicted for terrorist activities.
According to the newspaper, the picture was originally posted on the microblogging site "Twitter" the father of the child Sharrufom Khaled, who is currently fighting on the side of militant group "Islamic State" in Syria.
Earlier Sharruf left for a four-year prison term in Australia for what was planning to carry out terrorist attacks in Sydney and Melbourne.
The authorities banned him from leaving the country after the release into the wild, but Sharruf manages to go to Syria, using his brother's passport.
According to Tony Abbott, picture shows the atrocities that are capable fighters "of the Islamic state."
A number of Australian politicians and representatives of local Muslim communities also expressed outrage snapshot publication, saying that is imprinted on the image scene "is a shock and disgust."
"That's my boy"
Australia announced Sharrufa an international arrest warrant in July this year, after his page in the "Twitter" there were pictures of another Australian, Mohamed Elomara that holds the severed heads of the Syrian army.
In the photograph published Australian, shows the little boy in a baseball cap and blue shirt, which keeps both hands at the height of the severed head.
It tells the newspaper caption reads: "That's my boy." The publication claims that the picture was taken in the Syrian city of Raqqa in the north.
Other photographs captured himself Sharruf in field uniform, posing with her three children - presumably his sons.
According to the authorities of the country, is currently in the Middle East as part of various groups fighting at least 150 holders of Australian passports.
In late July, representatives of the UN Press said that the militants of the "Islamic state" may be included in the list of persons suspected of having committed war crimes. 

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