Ibrahim Uwais gave his parents and everyone around him the
impression that he hates Boko Haram because of the “damage” they are doing to
Islam but he has now gone to Syria apparently to join the Islamic State
militants.
His distraught father, Mohammed Uwais who served as the chief justice of Nigeria from 1995 to 2006 was still trying to come to terms with the news when he suffered a suspected armed robbery attack last weekend, although he was not hurt. Ibrahim, described as a 41-year-old “reserved and committed Muslim”, has two wives and four children, we learnt. His elder wife was the head of a private school in Abuja while the younger worked with the Debt Management Office (DMO). When he took the decision to go to Syria to team up with the “jihadists” of the Islamic State, he reportedly called his wives aside and told them they were free to return to their parents. “But both of them said they would go with him,” a source in the know of the development told us, adding that they took all their children with them. When the retired justice was alerted on the disappearance of his son and his family, he became apprehensive and started to make investigations. He went to report to the security agencies who told him they would investigate the claim that his son might have gone to Syria. We could not confirm the airline or route Ibrahim flew out of Nigeria or the date he left, but sources said he travelled through Turkey, which shares border with the war-torn Syria. Parts of Syria and Iraq are under the control of the Islamic State, which carries out summary executions, including beheadings and death by stoning, of those accused of flouting its sharia law. The Turkish embassy in Abuja was compelled to disclose the details of Ibrahim’s movement through a court injunction,The embassy confirmed that it issued visas to Ibrahim and members of his family. The details of his arrival in Turkey were made available, while images of CCTV recordings were also said to have been analysed by the Turkish security agencies to establish their movement. Hated Boko Haram Ibrahim, who dropped out of the university and went into full-time business in his early 20s, is the unlikeliest man to volunteer for the Islamic State, according to family friends who spoke with. “He hated everything Boko Haram stood for, and often queried why they would be killing innocent women and children in the name of Islam,” a source said. “With the benefit of hindsight, he was probably trying to cover up his plans. There was no way you would have suspected that he was ever going to be a fundamentalist himself.” He was a student of King’s College, Lagos, and went on to the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, “where he was radicalised”, according to a former student of Queen’s College, Lagos, who said that Ibrahim “was very popular with QC girls in those days”. A family source confirmed that Ibrahim left Nigeria with his family early February “without a word”, keeping his extended family in the dark. “The fact that he didn’t say goodbye to both parents, and the deafening silence from his end since then, seems to lend credence to this storyline (that he has joined ISIS),” he said, adding that “we are just praying for news of them, news of any sorts”.
His distraught father, Mohammed Uwais who served as the chief justice of Nigeria from 1995 to 2006 was still trying to come to terms with the news when he suffered a suspected armed robbery attack last weekend, although he was not hurt. Ibrahim, described as a 41-year-old “reserved and committed Muslim”, has two wives and four children, we learnt. His elder wife was the head of a private school in Abuja while the younger worked with the Debt Management Office (DMO). When he took the decision to go to Syria to team up with the “jihadists” of the Islamic State, he reportedly called his wives aside and told them they were free to return to their parents. “But both of them said they would go with him,” a source in the know of the development told us, adding that they took all their children with them. When the retired justice was alerted on the disappearance of his son and his family, he became apprehensive and started to make investigations. He went to report to the security agencies who told him they would investigate the claim that his son might have gone to Syria. We could not confirm the airline or route Ibrahim flew out of Nigeria or the date he left, but sources said he travelled through Turkey, which shares border with the war-torn Syria. Parts of Syria and Iraq are under the control of the Islamic State, which carries out summary executions, including beheadings and death by stoning, of those accused of flouting its sharia law. The Turkish embassy in Abuja was compelled to disclose the details of Ibrahim’s movement through a court injunction,The embassy confirmed that it issued visas to Ibrahim and members of his family. The details of his arrival in Turkey were made available, while images of CCTV recordings were also said to have been analysed by the Turkish security agencies to establish their movement. Hated Boko Haram Ibrahim, who dropped out of the university and went into full-time business in his early 20s, is the unlikeliest man to volunteer for the Islamic State, according to family friends who spoke with. “He hated everything Boko Haram stood for, and often queried why they would be killing innocent women and children in the name of Islam,” a source said. “With the benefit of hindsight, he was probably trying to cover up his plans. There was no way you would have suspected that he was ever going to be a fundamentalist himself.” He was a student of King’s College, Lagos, and went on to the Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, “where he was radicalised”, according to a former student of Queen’s College, Lagos, who said that Ibrahim “was very popular with QC girls in those days”. A family source confirmed that Ibrahim left Nigeria with his family early February “without a word”, keeping his extended family in the dark. “The fact that he didn’t say goodbye to both parents, and the deafening silence from his end since then, seems to lend credence to this storyline (that he has joined ISIS),” he said, adding that “we are just praying for news of them, news of any sorts”.
Although there is strong evidence suggesting that Ibrahim is in
Syria, the family has not given up hope of getting him to abandon his mission
and return home. “We have no idea how he got himself involved in this,” a friend
of the family said. Meanwhile, Uwais himself was still battling to make sense
of the “sad development” when he had a traumatic experience in the hands of
suspected armed robbers at his Abuja home. “Armed robbers put a gun to the head
of this 79-year-old gentleman. Not satisfied with what they could get out of
him, they proceeded to lock him up in a dusty, mosquito-ridden room,” a source
said. One of his wives reportedly discovered where he was locked up six hours
after the robbers left. Uwais has refused to comment on his son’s disappearance since the story
was first.

No comments:
Post a Comment