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Nine British medics enter ISIS stronghold to work in hospitals

Eight of the nine British medics. Clockwise from left: Hisham Mohammed Fadlallah, Tasneem Suleyman Huseyin, Ismail Hamadoun, Nada Sami Kader, Mohamed Osama Badri Mohammed, Rowan Kamal Zine El Abidine, Tamer Ahmed Ebu Sebah and Lena Maumoon Abdulqadir.


By Marga Zambrana, Hazar Aydemir in Istanbul and Emma Graham-Harrison
Sunday, March 22, 2015

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Nine young British medical students have travelled illegally to Syria and are believed to be working in hospitals in Islamic State-controlled areas, the Observer can reveal. Their families were mounting a desperate effort on Saturday at the Turkish-Syrian border to persuade them to come home.

The group of four women and five men crossed the border last week, apparently keeping their plans secret from relatives until just before entering Syria, when one woman sent her sister a brief message and a smiling selfie.

“We all assume that they are in Tel Abyad now, which is under Isis control. The conflict out there is fierce, so medical help must be needed,” Turkish opposition politician Mehmet Ali Ediboglu told the Observer, shortly after meeting the families.

“They have been cheated, brainwashed. That is what I, and their relatives, think.”

Both he and the students’ parents were convinced that the young medics wanted to work with Isis, Ediboglu said, but they were also certain that the group did not plan to take up arms. “Let’s not forget about the fact that they are doctors; they went there to help, not to fight. So this case is a little bit different.”

The Home Office said that the medics would not automatically face prosecution under anti-terror laws if they tried to return to the UK, as long as they could prove they had not been fighting.

A government source said: “UK law makes provisions to deal with different conflicts in different ways – fighting in a foreign war is not automatically an offence but will depend on the nature of the conflict and the individual’s own activities.”

All of the group are in their late teens or early 20s, with Sudanese roots, and had been enrolled at medical school in Khartoum. Three had graduated and the others were still studying; they may also have travelled with two Sudanese classmates, Ediboglu said.

“These kids were born and raised in England, but they were sent to Sudan to study at medical school,” Ediboglu said. “I’ve asked the families why they sent their children to study there, and as I understood it, they wanted them to experience a more Islamic culture and not to forget their roots.”

They flew from the Sudanese capital to Istanbul on 12 March, took a bus to the border the next day and crossed over soon after, apparently keeping their plans secret from relatives in the UK.

Nineteen-year-old Lena Maumoon Abdulqadir, one of the youngest members of the group, finally alerted her family when she sent a brief message to her sister, but it was too late by then to stop them leaving Turkey.

Syria and Turkey share a porous 500-mile border, one that smugglers have crisscrossed for several years now with recruits and funds for groups fighting the government of Bashar al-Assad. Under mounting US pressure there has been a crackdown on border security, but only in some places; in others passage remains relatively easy.

With Abdulqadir are three other women and five men, who have been named as Nada Sami Kader, Rowan Kamal Zine El Abidine, Tasneem Suleyman Huseyin, Ismail Hamadoun, Tamer Ahmed Ebu Sebah, Mohamed Osama Badri Mohammed, Hisham Mohammed Fadlallah and Sami Ahmed Kadir.

Abdulqadir’s father, Maumoon, bought a ticket to Turkey the evening he heard about her plans, and appears to have emerged as the unofficial leader of the group of seven parents who rushed to Turkey to try to get their children home. “We are all here,” he said when reached by phone at a temporary base in southern Turkey, but said the families did not want to comment further.

In a message to her sister, Lena Abdulqadir said she wanted to “volunteer to help wounded Syrian people”. But both Ediboglu and their families are convinced they are working as doctors with a jihadi group, probably Isis.

“She was living in a land which needs a lot of doctors everywhere [Africa]. Why would she go all the way to Syria for volunteering?” Maumoon Abdulqadir told the Birgün newspaper, which showed him holding a picture of his daughter, smiling in a red headscarf.

He informed the British police before heading off to find his daughter, he said, and has also filed a case with Turkish police, insisting that the group cannot have crossed the border unnoticed. “I gave all the information I have to Turkish police. They seemed helpful … but there is no new information so far.”

There were hospitals just a few kilometres inside the border where the group might be working, Ediboglu said, criticising his own government for not doing more. “The kids are sending messages to the families every day saying ‘don’t worry about us, we are working, we are fine’. It shouldn’t be hard for the Turkish National Intelligence Service to track their phones. But they are taking things slow. Unfortunately we haven’t seen any support from our government yet. They didn’t help and I have the impression that they don’t care at all. But we are not going to give up looking for them, especially me.”

Turkey says it does everything possible to stop and turn back would-be jihadis – when it can identify them. The country has deported 1,500 European citizens who were trying to cross the border to join Isis and other jihadi groups fighting in Syria, according to Turkey’s ministry for EU affairs.

In London the Foreign Office said it was aware of the case and was providing consular assistance.


 





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