on Saturday 30 July, 2022

Canadian ISIS extremist who produced propaganda videos gets life sentence in US

Canadian extremist said to be a key player in the ISIS group’s propaganda production Mohammed Khalifa. (Twitter)
by : AFP

A Canadian extremist said to be a key player in the ISIS group’s propaganda production and who narrated multiple violent videos was sentenced Friday to life in prison, the US Department of Justice said.

Mohammed Khalifa pleaded guilty in December to conspiring to provide material support to ISIS resulting in death.

According to the Department of Justice (DOJ) indictment, he left Canada in 2013 to join ISIS in Syria, where he quickly took on a leading role in the self-proclaimed government that straddled that country and Iraq.

Khalifa, now 39, quickly began serving in “prominent roles” within ISIS and by 2014 had become a key member of a propaganda cell, the DOJ said, due in particular to his mastery of both English and Arabic.

That cell was notably behind the production of videos of foreign hostages being executed, including US journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, who were decapitated in 2014.

Khalifa additionally provided the English voiceover for two of the most “exceptionally violent” ISIS videos, from 2014 and 2017, in which he is seen executing Syrian soldiers, the DOJ said.

He is also the alleged narrator of recruitment videos showing ISIS attacks in France and Belgium, which urge others to take part in similar acts of violence.

In January 2019, he was captured during a firefight by Kurdish-dominated Syrian forces allied with the United States.

In an interview the same year with Canada’s CBC from his Syrian prison, Khalifa showed no regret for his actions. He said he wanted to return to Canada with his wife and their three children, but on the condition that he would not be tried there.

However, he was entrusted in 2021 to American authorities and ultimately transferred to the United States.