Scandalous video: Little Azerbaijani boy calls on his compatriots to kill infidels and cut off their heads
The little son of an Azerbaijani, who joined the terrorist organisation IS, called on the Azerbaijani residents to arrive in Syria and fight for the terrorists, Azerbaijani website 1news.az writes.
According to the report, Inter.az published a video where a little supporter of the IS repeats the memorised words, which as the video shows, someone standing by the camera ‘helps’ him say. The little terrorist calls to ‘fight for the Most High.
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“Come and join jihad. Perform Namaz. Arrive here. Why are you staying there like rabbits? Come here, kill the infidels, cut off their heads!” the little boy says.
APA agency reports that Siyavush Novruzov, the chairperson of the Committee on public unions and religious organisations of the Azerbaijani Parliament, said that up to 1000 young men from Azerbaijan are members of various extremist groups abroad.
According to the Silk Road Reporters http://www.silkroadreporters.com/2015/12/02/islamic-state-sees-surge-of-caucasus-recruits/, of the four Caucasian nations – Russia, Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia – only the last seems to have none of its nationals fighting with Islamic State jihadis in Iraq and Syria. Georgian authorities estimate that more than 200 of its citizens, primarily ethnic Chechens from the Pankisi Gorge region, are fighting in Syria and Iraq, while Baku estimates that 200-300 Azerbaijanis are there as well.
While Armenia is close to areas infested by the ‘Islamic State,’ it shares no frontiers with Syria or Iraq. Armenia’s miniscule Muslim community is served by the Blue Mosque in Yerevan. It is a Shia mosque and its mullah is Iranian, which rules out the possibility of Sunni radicalism emerging there, the article reads.
Two months ago IS jihadists destroyed the Holy Martyrs Armenian church in Deir ez-Zor, the sixth-largest city in Syria, erected to commemorate the victims of the 1915 Genocide in the Ottoman Empire. The Holy Martyrs Church, consecrated in 1991 as a memorial, served as a pilgrimage site for Armenians living in Syria and neighbouring countries. Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandyan condemned the desecration of the church, which contained the remains of victims, calling it a ‘horrible barbarity.’ Nalbandyan urged the international community to eliminate funding and supply sources to the IS to eradicate what he referred to as a disease that ‘threatens civilised mankind.’
Azerbaijani terrorists have long been fighting in the ranks of various terrorist groups in Syria, Afghanistan and Pakistan. They actively operate not only in the IS, but also in another terrorist organisation Al-Caeda which is rival to the IS. For instance, 30-year-old Mahmud Azeri, an Azerbaijani from Baku, is the commander of one of Al-Caeda subdivisions and fights against the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s troops and Shia groups, particularly the IS.
Azerbaijani media reported about the death of about 200 Azerbaijani terrorists in Syria alone over the past three years. There have also been frequent media reports about Azerbaijani terrorist commanders’ liquidation. Notably, there is a recent trend of the Azerbaijanis taking their little children with them as they join terrorist groups.
The relationship between international terrorist groups and Azerbaijan originated in the early 1990s. Back then, the Azerbaijani army, having failed in the aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (NKR), retreated with losses. Trying to save the situation, the Azerbaijani leadership, headed by Heydar Aliyev attracted to the war against the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh international terrorists and members of radical groups from Afghanistan (groupings of Gulbuddin Hekmatyar), Turkey ("Grey Wolves", etc.), Chechnya (groupings Basayev and Raduyev etc.) and some other regions.
Despite the involvement of thousands of foreign mercenaries and terrorists in the Azerbaijani army during the war, the Azerbaijani aggression against Nagorno-Karabakh Republic failed, and the Baku authorities were forced to sign an armistice with the NKR and Armenia. However, international terrorists established ties in Azerbaijan, and used them in the future. The Azerbaijanis were recruited and sent to Afghanistan and the North Caucasus, where they participated in the battles against the forces of the international coalition and Russian organizations. Over the recent years, the citizens of Azerbaijan have been actively engaged in terrorism and extremist activities in Russia, Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq.
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