ISIS urges supporters to hide behind fake job ads

ISIS urges supporters to hide behind fake job ads
Tue May 30, 2017 13:45:55

ISIS has called on supporters to place fake ads on popular websites like Gumtree to lure innocent victims who will be held hostage and then executed.

(NineNewsTV) -- The latest edition of the terror group's online magazine Rumiyah outlines in chilling detail how would-be lone wolves can carry out such attacks.

In a disturbing featured section of the 58-page magazine titled Just Terror Tactics, Australia's home-grown terrorists Man Haron Monis, Numan Haider, and Farhad Jabar are all named and applauded.

The article declares that the objective of hostage taking is "to create as much carnage and terror as one possibly can". For optimum impact, potential attackers are encouraged to create a drawn out hostage situation to leverage maximum media attention. 

 "This is because the hostile kafir (a derogatory word to describe non-believers) only understands one language and that is the language of force, the language of killing, stabbing and slitting throats, chopping off heads, flattening them under trucks, and burning them alive."

In what is a kind of murderous ISIS playbook, the propaganda piece advises a variety of ways a supporter can hijack popular classified ad websites trafficked by millions of people every day to take hostages.

ISIS methods include advertising decoy jobs, second hand items for sale and rooms to rent on websites like Gumtree, eBay and Craig's list.

All are ploys designed to snare unsuspecting victims for execution.

The six-page article goes on to explain how to subdue and kill people with knives and other weapons, once they have been trapped.

Rumiyah instructs readers that bogus job advertisements posted to websites such as Gumtree should ideally appeal to men and non-Muslims.

"After garnering a significant amount of applicants, one can then arrange the 'job interview', location and times, spacing out the applicants' appointment times so as to give oneself time to subdue each target as he arrives – luring him to an appropriate location before attacking, subduing, binding, and then slaughtering them.”

If advertising property for rent, it is recommended to offer a fictitious small single room or studio apartment, or something "suitable for students".

The article cautions those setting up ads for second-hand items on eBay, Craig's list and Gumtree that prices should be set at an appropriate level, so as to not attract suspicion.

A well-deployed ad selling make-believe goods will stipulate that the buyer must pick up the item, and "upon the target's arrival, one can then proceed to initiate his attack”.

Typical of ISIS, whose slick and aggressive propaganda machine has been used to recruit followers and incite attacks with alarming effect, the content and language in the article is confronting.

The word "harvest" is used to describe the killing of western citizens "residing in the lands of disbelief".

Readers are pointed to a back issue of the multi-language magazine which showcases what kind of knives are best suited to carry out an execution.

Tactics such as turning up the volume of the stereo to drown out screams and what type of equipment can be bought from a hardware store to restrain a victim's hands are also included.

Over the past 18 months, counter-terror analysts have observed just how responsive ISIS supporters can be to such suggestions.

Earlier issues of Rumiyah have detailed how knife attacks should be carried out in public, and implored followers to drive cars into crowded public spaces such as festivals and markets.

This issue's Just Terror Tactics feature opens by briefly paying tribute to Man Haron Monis, Numan Haider, and Farhad Jabar, who have all launched recent terror attacks in Australia.

ISIS used its social media channels and encrypted messenger services to call on supporters to wage "all-out war" on the West during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, it was reported over the weekend.

 

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