Saturday, January 23, 2016

UK: Channel 4 Airs Documentary, "The Jihadi Next Door", Called "Shocking and Crucial"



From the Telegraph:
Gerard O'Donovan reviews Jamie Roberts's eye-opening documentary, which featured a chilling interview with 'Jihadi Sid', the bouncy castle salesman turned Isil executioner 
It is hardly unusual these days to see men in beards preaching radicalism and hatred on our TV screens. But it is unusual, as in The Jihadis Next Door (Channel 4), to see such a man waving the flag of Islamic State in his Walthamstow garage, knowing that from there, two years later, having fled to Syria with his family, he went on to become suspected of being at the center of a horrific murder video by the so called Islamic State in Syria. 
This shocking footage of Siddhartha Dhar (aka Abu Rumaysah), now known in certain sectors of the press as “Jihadi Sid”, filmed two years ago, may have been the most publicity-garnering in Jamie Roberts eye-opening film about extremist hate preachers in the UK. 
But it was not the most repulsive. That shame undoubtedly went to a segment featuring the two men who where the chief focus of the film, Abu Haleema and Mohammed Shamsuddin, leaders of the London-based recruiting and propaganda group of which Dhar was once a leading light. 
Haleema and Shamsuddin spent much of the film denying that they supported Isis while spouting sentiments that would suggest otherwise. 
But actions always speak louder than weasel words and in one scene Roberts caught them gleefully tucking into supper while watching – and laughing at – online videos in which innocent men were being murdered by members of the so-called Islamic State in Syria.
GO READ THE WHOLE THING. 

1 comment:

The Last English Prince said...

I watched the complete video.

It does seem amazing that a man can claim "chronic fatigue syndrome" and yet find the energy to recruit and harass others on the streets of the U.K.

Simple step? Revoke the welfare, make the man work. Hard work does tend to clear the mind and adjust priorities.