Australian Jihadist Khaled Sharrouf Tweets Picture Of Young Son Holding Decapitated Head (GRAPHIC PICTURE)
A horrifying picture of a young boy holding a decapitated head aloft has been posted to Twitter.
He is believed to be the Sydney-raised son of Khaled Sharrouf, an Australian who fled the country last year to fight in Syria as an Islamic State fighter, News Corp reported.
The image was posted with the caption: “That’s my boy.”
He is believed to be the Sydney-raised son of Khaled Sharrouf, an Australian who fled the country last year to fight in Syria as an Islamic State fighter, News Corp reported.
The image was posted with the caption: “That’s my boy.”
Further pictures from the same twitter account (which has since been closed) show Sharrouf in camouflage fatigues, posing with his three sons with the flag of the Islamic State behind them.
Sharrouf, who is wanted on terrorism charges in Australia is also seen holding a decapitated head in some images.
The Sydney Morning Herald writes Sharrouf escaped to the Middle East on his brother’s passport and has demanded the release of 12 Muslim prisoners.
A senior police source told the newspaper Sharrouf was a “prolific liar” and he did not intend to negotiate with him.
Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbot condemned the image as “hideous” and “barbaric”.
Sharrouf is wanted on terrorism charges in Australia
He told ABC Radio: “(The) Islamic State – as they’re now calling themselves – it’s not just a terrorist group, it’s a terrorist army and they’re seeking not just a terrorist enclave but effectively a terrorist state, a terrorist nation.
“This does pose extraordinary problems – extraordinary problems, not just for the people of the Middle East, but for the wider world and we see more and more evidence of just how barbaric this particular entity is.”
Lebanese Muslim Association president Samier Dandan told ABC he wished to distance the Australian Muslim community from it.
He said: “I stand very far from that concept – this is an act of a lunatic.
“Even if you are saying to me he made his won lift or carry and take a picture with a decapitated head this is something reflective of something we can all agree – this is an act of a lunatic.”
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