Shia team to bring back Indians recruited by ISIS in Iraq and Syria / More than two lakh volunteers have signed up

NEW DELHI: A delegation of six members from Anjuman-e Haideri (AEH), a Shia committee from Delhi, will go to Iraq to provide help and appeal to Indian Muslims, who have allegedly joined ISIS, to come back.

The Shia body is in touch with the Indian and Iraq governments and around 6000 volunteers are lined up to go to the war-torn country.

The cleric said that he himself will first lead a six-member team to Iraq on September 29 to assess the situation and chalk out details for sending volunteers from India for humanitarian aid and protection of religious shrines from IS terrorists.

“A six-member delegation of Anjumane-Haideri under my leadership will visit Iraq beginning from September 29. The delegation will hold high-level meetings in Baghdad, Najaf and Karbala to assess the situation. The details of sending a large number of Indian volunteers for protection of the religious shrines will be ironed out there,” the cleric said.

Kalbe Jawad added that once the delegation returns, the volunteers will be sent to Iraq.

Shia leader, Maulana Kalbe Jawwad Naqvi, in a news conference on Monday said that Zionists and their cohorts are reportedly engaged in training and financing the ISIS and other terrorist groups.

“There are reports that the ISIS terrorists injured in Iraq are being ferried by helicopters for treatment in Israel.” The delegation will do humanitarian work and doctors, nurses and engineers have been roped in to help.

When AEH asked people to volunteer, over 2 lakh people signed up. “Not only Muslims, even people from different religions have come forward to volunteer. There are doctors and engineers in the list and these will be sent to Iraq.”

ISIS has attracted jihadists from across the world to join them like the Chechen jihadist above.

The members of the committee said that anyone who supports ISIS, Boko Haram, al-Qaida isn’t a Muslim as no religion allows anyone to kill innocent people. They have also urged the Indian government to take ISIS seriously as it has threatened to attack Kashmir.

Members of AEH said to have recently received a letter from Khairullah, deputy minister of foreign affairs, government of Republic of Iraq, thanking the committee and Indian government for volunteering to protect holy shrines in Iraq.

Advocate Mehmood Pracha recently met the families of boys, who have reportedly joined ISIS, in Mumbai.

Shia leader Maulana Kalbe Jawwad Naqvi speaking at a gathering in Lucknow. (TOI file photo)

“The families of these youths do not believe in the ideology of the ISIS and they have appealed to the government to bring their boys back.”

When asked about Unnao MP Sakshi Maharaj’s remark on madrassas churning out terrorists, Naqvi said that the government should probe the claim and “If there is no truth, then the BJP leader should apologize.”

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