16 year olds Salma and
Zahra Halane who were among the top 20 students at their girls' school
in Manchester, left their parents' home in the middle of the night and
caught a flight to Turkey, before crossing the border. Police said the
pair are thought to have followed their elder brother, who ditched his
own 'excellent' academic career to join the ISIS terror group around a
year ago.
Friends said the twins had appeared to be typical teenagers,
pouting for selfies & shopping at Primark - but they are now feared
to be training for battle. Pictured left are visitors arriving at the
family's home.
Twin schoolgirls who followed their jihadi brother to Syria were hard-working students who hoped to train as doctors.
Sixteen-year-olds
Salma and Zahra Halane, who last summer achieved 28 GCSEs between them,
left their parents’ home in the middle of the night and caught a flight
to Turkey, before crossing the border.
Police said the pair are
thought to have followed their elder brother, who ditched his own
‘excellent’ academic career to join the ISIS terror group around a year
ago.
Friends
said the twins had appeared to be typical teenagers, pouting for
selfies and shopping at Primark – but they are now feared to be training
for battle.
Last night a rebel fighter boasted that he was teaching
girls as young as 16 how to fight. Yilmaz, a Dutch national who has been
in Syria for two years, ‘It’s extremely easy to get here. People go on holiday ... they end up in Syria.’
The twins’ parents raised the alarm last month, after finding the girls’ beds empty and their passports and clothes missing.
A
former neighbour said the couple had been ‘quite strict’, and did not
allow the girls to ‘mix with other children on the street’. Others
recalled that the twins wore headscarves when they were as young as
nine. But Rhea Headlam, who sat next to Zahra in primary school, said
they were ‘just normal teenage girls’.
‘I’m really shocked – I used to bump into them at Primark,’ she added. ‘They were both really clever.’
Last
summer Salma achieved 13 GCSEs – 11 of them at grades A* to C – while
Zahra passed 15, of which 12 were A*-C. The results put them in the top
10 per cent of their year group at Whalley Range High School for Girls
in Manchester.
They went on to study at Connell Sixth Form College,
where fellow students said they hoped to follow in the footsteps of
their elder sister Hafsa, 25, who is at medical school in Denmark after
graduating from Manchester University.
‘The twins both have
aspirations to become doctors – that is their ambition,’ said one.
Another claimed it was ‘typical’ of the girls to head to Syria ‘after
they had finished term’, adding: ‘They wouldn’t want to mess up their
education.
‘I’m shocked they have gone. They didn’t seem to be radical or extremist in their views.’
It
emerged yesterday that the girls’ devoutly Muslim Somali refugee
parents and their 11 children had been moved from an estate made famous
by the TV series Shameless to an upmarket suburb, after telling the
council they needed more bedrooms.
They were given a six-bedroom
end-terrace despite the protests of the existing tenant. Yesterday the
large back and front gardens were strewn with discarded household items
and children’s plastic toys.
The house's previous resident - a
40-year-old Army heroine who served in Bosnia - said last night she had
been booted out of the house by Manchester City Council so the twins and
their family could move in.
Former lance corporal Dawn Benjamin told
The Sun she had thought the house - her childhood home - would be
'going to a good family'.
She added: 'I lost my life, memories, everything I'd grown up with, to house jihadi wannabes'.
Ms
Benjamin and her young son had to move out after they were served with a
court order. The council confirmed the house had been needed for a
larger family.
Neighbours said the twins’ parents were keen to
share elements of Somalian culture with them, taking round dishes of
traditional delicacies for them to try. The twins’ father Ibrahim is
understood to teach at a nearby mosque, where leaders this week issued a
statement repudiating extremism and opposing violence of all kinds.
Mohammed
Shafiq, of the Ramadan Foundation, said the family were moderate
Muslims who know all about the dangers of war-torn countries. ‘They were
desperately unhappy to discover [their son] had gone to Syria, and they
thought they were keeping a watchful eye on their other children. Then
this happens,’ he said.
Sources believe Salma and Zahra were inspired
by their brother’s transformation into a jihadi fighter, and became
radicalised themselves while viewing extremist Islamist material online.
According
to police sources, their brother also travelled to the family’s native
Somalia, where he may have linked up with another Islamist terror group
al-Shabab.
A friend said the brother was known for his ability to recite long passages of the Koran.
Officers
are investigating how the girls funded their own trip, over fears they
have been bankrolled by jihadi fighters who want them as their wives.
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