Ali Alosaimi has fled to Syria to join the Islamic State terror group
A
navy officer who trained at one of Britain’s most prestigious maritime
colleges has fled to Syria to join the Islamic State terror group.
Defence
experts warned last night that 28-year-old Ali Alosaimi’s high-level
skills and exhaustive knowledge of the nation’s shipping fleet
represented a terrifying security threat.
Having
already targeted passenger jets, there has long been concern that
militants will try to bring terror to the seas by attacking ships and
ferries.
‘This
suddenly raises the spectre of IS damaging shipping,’ said former Royal
Navy chief Admiral Lord West. ‘Someone with his knowledge opens up a
whole new area where terrorism can take place.’
Kuwaiti-born
Alosaimi’s personal details were found among a cache of IS documents
leaked to The Mail on Sunday. They reveal that before leaving for Syria,
Alosaimi lived in South Shields, Tyne and Wear, where he enrolled on a
three-year Merchant Navy officer course in 2011. He had previously
worked for a state-owned oil tanker company in Kuwait.
If
he had pursued his naval career after gaining a Higher National Diploma
in nautical science, he could have had access to vessels under charter
to the Ministry of Defence. These are used to transport military
supplies and other cargoes vital to national security.
Alosaimi studied at South Tyneside College’s Marine School, sharing a flat nearby with a Kuwati friend.
The
college declined to comment last night, but part of his course,
specifically for deck officers, involved serving on a ship, and he
acquired an extensive insight into the UK’s maritime capability that
would be invaluable to his future IS commanders.
Deck
officers are responsible for the safety of the vessel, planning the
ship’s passage, loading and discharging cargo, and all communications.
Gavin
Simmonds, director of security at the UK Chamber of Shipping, said: ‘An
individual with three years’ experience in this area with the Merchant
Navy would be of use to a terror organisation intent upon targeting
shipping. The idea of an insider with such knowledge joining the crew
of, say, an oil tanker is unnerving.
‘There
is a significant environmental risk should there be such a spectacular
attempt by terrorists, and this is profoundly worrying. However, we must
balance concerns against the ability of an individual to cause such an
incident.’
Defence experts warned last night that
28-year-old Ali Alosaimi’s high-level skills and exhaustive knowledge
of the nation’s shipping fleet represented a terrifying security threat
Documents reveal that before leaving
for Syria, Alosaimi lived in South Shields, Tyne and Wear, where he
enrolled on a three-year Merchant Navy officer course in 2011
Lord
West added: ‘I think the most danger is posed by IS acquiring a Liquid
Natural Gas container. These are highly flammable and could cause a very
large explosion. Britain and the US have been worried about this for
some time.’
The
Merchant Navy, which now comprises about 1,500 vessels and 30,000
seamen, performed a key role during the Second World War and Falklands
conflict.
While
in the UK, Alosaimi posted nearly 100 pictures of himself on Facebook,
where he called himself ‘Captain Take Care’. In one selfie, he wears
dark aviator sunglasses, aping Tom Cruise from the 1986 film Top Gun. In
another, posted in 2010, he wears a navy-style cap and writes: ‘I took
my place among my crew to sail the seas as a capitano.’
Last
night, Alosaimi’s former housemate in South Shields said that he was
radicalised by watching videos of killings in Syria committed by
President Bashar Assad’s troops. The friend, who does not want to be
identified, said: ‘He went to Syria because he was angry about Assad.
All Muslims are angry, but Ali acted on it. In this day and age, you
don’t need people to radicalise you. The internet is enough.’
He
added that Alosaimi finished his HND course, but was two exams away
from obtaining his marine licence, which would have allowed him to
captain any ship.
Alosaimi’s
family in Kuwait said he became radicalised in the final year of his
course. He grew a beard and began preaching to teenage relatives, urging
them to join IS. Until then, they insisted, he was a typical student
who ‘danced, smoked and had girlfriends’.
According
to his uncle, it was the death of Alosaimi’s younger brother, Abdullah,
killed while fighting with fanatics in Syria aged 19, that was the
turning point. The uncle, also called Ali, said: ‘He seemed a changed
man after his brother’s death.
‘He
grew a beard and did not talk to anyone like he used to. He used to
call his family every fortnight but he visited at the end of 2013 and
that was the last we heard from him.’
He
said Ali had been preparing for his final exams and was primed for a
career with the Kuwait National Petroleum Company after he graduated.
When he disappeared, the family contacted the company, which confirmed
he passed his exams but never took up his post.
Instead, the family received an encrypted Whatsapp message in Arabic seven months later.
Mr
Alosaimi said: ‘The message said he was in Syria with IS and he was
going to go to heaven. We do not know if he is dead or alive.
‘His father does not have a clue what has happened to him and we are not telling him much because he cannot handle the shock.
‘He
knows about the message but he still hopes he will come back. We have
no way of finding him or knowing if he is dead or alive. We told the
Government as soon as we got the message but what can they do?’
Alosaimi studied at South Tyneside College’s Marine School (pictured) sharing a flat nearby with a Kuwati friend
Alosaimi
received thousands of pounds funding for his course from the Kuwaiti
government. His details were found among 40 application forms from
would-be IS fighters given to The Mail on Sunday by a source in Turkey,
who has close contacts with the terror group. All are either British
nationals or young men who have lived in Britain.
The documents are produced by the group’s so-called ‘General Department of Borders’ and show Alosaimi joined IS in April 2014.
Next
to ‘educational achievements’, Alosaimi says he was a ‘navy officer in
Britain.’ And against ‘profession’ before entering Syria, he states:
‘Employee in the navy.
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